As you flip through your holiday cards this season and glance at the smiling faces, there is a chance you are looking at photos that helped to curb hunger or granted a wish to a child with cancer.
This October, a cabal of photographers, primarily from the Twin Cities, did a slew of photo sessions and donated the proceeds — $20,000 — to two charitable organizations.
The photographer nonprofit, One Month to Give, is the brainchild of 19-year-old Perry Smith, a former Lakeville North student and now a full-time photographer.
Smith, whose cancer was diagnosed when he was 15, said that experience "really redirected the focus of how I was living life."
"When everything is on the chopping block, when you don't know if you're going to make it to the next day," he said, it tends to put things in perspective.
After that experience, Smith embraced his passion for photography. He bought and sold cameras on Craigslist and built up a good set of gear, he took senior portraits for his classmates, and he eventually mentored under some area photographers to build his skills.
He also, he said, became committed to living a "purpose-filled life that gives back and helps people."
Growing momentum
Three years ago, a challenge from his youth group to raise money for a charitable cause made him deliberate as to how he could use his existing skills to make a difference.