#Robin Gamble Photography
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Event Photography in Detroit - Robin Gamble Photography
Robin Gamble Photography is a Detroit-based event photographer who specializes in capturing the moments that matter. Whether you're planning a wedding, a corporate event, or a private party, Robin can help you capture the memories that will last a lifetime. Her work has been featured in publications such as The Detroit Free Press and The Knot, and she has been recognized by the American Society of Photographers.
Visit: https://open.spotify.com/episode/1BwtrinQzGhiCXdtRQYaMx
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Boss! You want it? Go get it.
Success happens with ACTION and MOMENTUM.
So, get up. Get going.
Take the FIRST step.
BIG, BOLD, F*ckin’ Move Yo A$$ …,
Outta the dark …,
And, into the LIGHT.
It���s YOUR move. Get it.
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✅ 📸 Robin Gamble | Robin Gamble Photography 📸
✅ 💇🏻♀️ David Arena 💇🏻♀️
✅ Melissa Hirsch | Rodan + Fields Skincare
✅ 💄 Bobbi Brown Cosmetics 💄
✅ 👗J.Crew 👗
✅ 💎 Silpada Designs 💎
✅ Location: Kensington Metropark | Michigan
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MOTHERLOAD from LYNCH SISTERS FILM on Vimeo.
It is often said that the hardest part of any adventure is getting out the door. Planning and packing are tedious and time consuming. But the moment you cross over the threshold from the distractions of the real world to the freedom of the hills, everything seems to just fall into place.
(Said no mother ever.)
Follow professional skiers and mothers Izzy Lynch and Tessa Treadway as they carry the load of loss, life changing events, and the love of their children into the mountains where they find the moments of peace, growth and healing that help them carry on.
A LYNCH SISTERS FILM
Dedicated to our moms: Sandy Parry Sarah German
Featuring: Tessa Treadway Kasper Treadway Raffi Treadway Malto Treadway Izzy Lynch Knox Garneau
Directed & Edited: Zoya Lynch Written & Produced: Izzy Lynch
Presented by: Arc’teryx - Jill Young
With Support From: BUFF- Marie Eve Bilodeau Rossignol- Nick Castagnoli Thule - Martin Cardinal Revelstoke Mountain Resort- Carly Moran Kicking Horse Mountain Resort - Tyson Newell Giro- Travis Tomczak
Cinematography: Peter Wojnar Elora Braden Tom Poole Zoya Lynch Tim Grey Dave Treadway Garret VanSwearingen Mitch Cheek
Graphic & Motion Design: Blair Richmond & Imperial Post
Audio: Ken Bibby aka “Rick”
Sound Design & Mix: Scotty Beam & Cleod9 Music
Color: Bryan Ralph & Trout Lake Colour
Photography: Zoya Lynch Robin O’Neill Blake Jorgenson Aidan Trudel
Music: Selah “Heritage” Easy Giant “My Salty Jente” Silhouettes “Downstream” Ocie Elliot “We Fall In” The Hunts “Love of Mine”
Newspaper Article courtesy of CTV Vancouver
Special Thanks to: The “Mannies” Aiden Trudel Mackenzie Gamble John Parry Josh Parry Gill Parry Sarah German Justin Nicholas Isaac Kamink Molly Baker James Kim George Weetman Verity King Brylee Geddis
In memory of: Dave Treadway
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Robin Gamble Photography Brings the Excellent Images with Higher Clarity
Discover the captivating world of Robin Gamble Photography. Immerse yourself in stunning visuals that exhibit exceptional clarity and artistic finesse. Explore a gallery filled with breathtaking images that capture the essence of beauty and emotion. Let Robin Gamble Photography transport you to a realm where every detail shines through, leaving you in awe.
Visit: https://issuu.com/robingamblephotography/docs/robin_gamble_photography_brings_the_excellent_imag
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Ever been so upset you were outta control?
You got triggered. You lost your cool.
You said and did stuff you later regretted?
And, faced or suffered negative consequences for your actions?
There’s another way.
Mastering conflict resolution and emotional regulation skills keep you CALM, CONFIDENT, and in-Control.
The choice is yours.
Keep letting your negative emotions get the better of you …,
Or, get a GRIP and flip the switch so that you tap into the SUPER-POWERs 💥 of being:
✅ CALM 💥
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Contact
Joyce Weiss, M.A., CSP, CVP, Communication and Conflict Resolution Coach and
Janette Ghedotte, MS, MA LLP of Accurate Body Language to discover your internal power.
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✅ 📸 Robin Gamble | Robin Gamble Photography 📸
✅ 💇🏻♀️ David Arena 💇🏻♀️
✅ 💄 Bobbi Brown Cosmetics 💄
✅ 👗 J.Crew 👗
✅ 💎 Silpada Designs 💎
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Professional Brand Photography in Southfield
For professional brand photography services in Southfield, Michigan, consider reaching out to "Robin Gamble Photography." With a focus on capturing the essence and personality of your brand, Robin Gamble specializes in creating high-quality images that tell your brand's story and resonate with your target audience. Whether you need product photography, headshots, lifestyle images, or content for your website and social media platforms, Robin Gamble Photography delivers stunning visuals that elevate your brand presence. Contact Robin Gamble Photography through her website, https://www.robingamblephotography.com/
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WDIV Local 4 News/ClickOnDetroit
Rhonda Walker Foundation
Robin Gamble | Robin Gamble Photography
know Janette Ghedotte, MS, MA LLP of Accurate Body Language's
secret of…,
Feet 🦶 🦶 first 🥇..,
(Jazz) Hands 🙌 next.
Always know what your hands 🙌
and the other person’s hands
are doing at all times.
From ahead to Toes, the BODY Always Shows the TRUTH.
✅ 📸 Robin Gamble | Robin Gamble Photography 📸
✅ 💇🏻♀️ David Arena 💇🏻♀️
✅ Beautycounter Skincare
✅ 💄 Bobbi Brown Cosmetics 💄
✅ 👗J.Crew 👗
✅ 💎 Silpada Designs 💎
✅ Location: WDIV Local 4 News/ClickOnDetroit | Michigan
#wdiv tv#local 4 news#rhonda walker#rhonda walker foundation#accurate body language#body language#hands#jazz hands#body language expert#body language training#janette ghedotte
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I drive up Springwood Ave. to Ridge on a sunny September morning. The streets are virtually deserted and the empty lots and buildings look foreboding. I am on my way to meet Barsheen Ridout, a 57-year-old, long-time resident of Asbury Park who I befriended while taking street photos. He stopped me in front of the barbershop and asked me about my camera. We got to talking about photography and Asbury Park in general. When I told him about my project, he was suspicious, maybe even angry. His exact words were “What I want to know is why a little white girl gives a shit about the west side of Asbury Park and the people who live here!” I had prepared myself for a question like this, but was taken aback at how much I had upset him. I tried to explain how I felt that all stories need to be told and I wanted to help tell them. This seemed to assuage him a bit, and he begrudgingly agreed to meet with me to be interviewed.
I had asked him to pick a spot in Asbury Park that had the most meaning to him, and he told me to meet him at his childhood home on Ridge Ave., which is where I am headed now. I pull up to the house and Barsheen is waiting for me with a wistful look on his face. He tells me this house brings back so many memories. It was his aunt’s home and he lived with her on and off throughout the 60’s and 70’s. His life has not been easy but the times he spent in this house with his aunt were happy ones. Looking back, he realizes this home in Asbury Park was a safe haven for him.
“I lived here from when I was very little until I was 9. Both my parents were IV drug users. Dopers. My father was a pickpocket and my mother did anything he told her to do. It was in my blood, in my family’s blood. So my aunt was raising me. When I was 9, me and my sister decided to run away to go live with my parents in New York. We moved to Harlem and ended up living in 4 different places over 5 years. We were gypsies. Within the 5 years a lot of stuff happened. My father was in jail for shooting somebody. And then the same guy that killed my mother stabbed me. So my father was in the penitentiary and mother was dead and us kids had no one. So I came back to Asbury and my aunt’s house when I was 14.
I came back after the riots. Everything was so different. It was amazingly different. Sometimes I feel a little disconnected and connected to this place. It’s hard for me to say but every time I came back there was something new. It’s an interesting perspective because I wasn’t always here but I always came back.”
We decided to walk around a little so Barsheen can describe what the neighborhood looked like when he was growing up. There is an empty lot next to his aunt’s house that he tells me there used to be full of trees and the kids would call it “the woods” and play in it. He points out a house across the street and tells me it used to be a candy shop owned by Puerto Ricans. As he talks, I can see that the memories are transporting Barsheen to a different time and he gets more animated as he points out different buildings, recalling his old neighborhood.
“These all used to be older houses but they all got knocked down and built over. My aunt used to send me to the store around the corner. There used to be a gas station right here. Lake Ave. is a whole lot different than it was back then. The whole avenue was full of stores. That used to the be nun’s home and the catholic hall. There was a church on the other corner.”
We walk up Lake Ave. and it is hard to imagine the bustling neighborhood he is describing. Barsheen points to one of the very few businesses that are open.
“That liquor store been there forever, since I can remember. See there are 3 things you can count on in a poverty-stricken area. Liquor stores, churches, and laundromats. Those things will always be there in low income areas. That shit right there’s been killing us for a long time. Because you won’t find that in suburbs. You can’t walk to the liquor store in the suburbs, you gotta get in your car and drive there. But in every inner-city poverty stricken community, you can walk to numerous liquor stores. That fires me up. I used to frequent the store a whole lot in the 80’s. Now understanding the science of control and conditioning, about how the establishment that kills a community can stay in the same spot for the past 40 years makes me understand it a little more. None of it is owned by members of the community. Indians run the liquor store. In the 60’s Caucasians owned it. In the 80’s they took it over. Now I’m not talking about the owners. I’m talking about the condition of the institution. That they can come to a place like this and profit. The circumstances and situations.”
As he speaks, he raises his voice and is growing more and more upset. A man on a bicycle rides past us and stops to stare. Barsheen tells him “peace” and assures him we are fine, and he rides away slowly. We are standing in front of a non-descript building and I notice that Barsheen is looking up at the second floor.
“Up top here used to be a gambling club called the 54 House. From when I can remember till the late 80’s. I remember it when I was a kid, then I remember when I was old enough to go in it. We’d play cards, shoot dice, it was a social place for the community. Even in the 70’s when I was a teenager the block was alive. It was a construction town. There were a whole lot more people and whole lot more buildings. This was the construction man’s and the common man’s place to socialize. They had a charter from the city to have a social club.”
I am curious about what police presence was like at that time and whether they were ever shut down.
“They [54 House] did illegal activity, however the guy who ran it for years, who was called Rayfield, was partners with a guy called Artesia Moore. He [Moore] was an ex police officer and he married into a family that owned the Arking lounge. He worked for the gangsters. When his father in law passed away, Artesia’s wife gave him the racket for the town. So him and Rayfield ran it. This was left alone by the cops. They were left alone as long as no drugs were involved. I’m not sure what happened to it [54 House]. I left Asbury for a while and when I came back it just wasn’t there no more”
We decide move our conversation to Kula café, a block away. Big glass windows afford us a great view of Lake Ave. We are right down the block from 2nd Baptist church was where Barsheen was baptized. He tells me it was THE church back then. He tells me it’s where “all the uppity people went.”
He tells me that the café we are sitting in used to be a drug store. There used to be a bar across the street called the Turf Club in the 50’s and 60’s. It was home to many famous performers including the then up and coming Clarence Clemmons. He tells me that both sides of the street were full of bars and lounges. There was the Paramount Pool Hall. It used to be a movie theater until Barsheen’s cousin, Robin Hill bought it and turned it into a pool room. On the other side of the block was Cuba’s bar.
“My aunt Evelyn Smith, worked there, she was barmaid. The husband was Cuba and the wife was Mini. When the gangsters came down to Asbury and they would bring black folks with them, they would break the glasses afterward. [They didn’t want to keep glasses that black folks had drank out of] So my aunt would ask if she could take them home instead. So she had a whole collection of glasses.”
I am slightly taken about by this. I am trying to understand the demographics of the west side at that time. I ask if the neighborhood was mixed.
“In the 60’s a lot of Italians owned things, like all those stores we call bodegas now. The paramount was a black club, the turf club was black too. Cuba’s was not. It was the elite. The borderline was the railroad track and Asbury Ave. Past there you didn’t find too many black people in the 60’s. If you went to Cookman Ave., you knew you had to act right. You knew you were someplace special. You better act right in the white folk’s shit. Cuz the borderline was the goddamn tracks. Then the riots happened in the 70’s. After everything was burnt down, there was a portion of Lake Ave. that was left empty on both sides. It never got rebuilt. Recently they built a few homes on both sides. Maybe in the 90s. But it’s never been the same.”
Barsheen tells me that in the 90’s there were black-run businesses in Downtown Asbury Park, which are all gone now; a result of gentrification.
“They had Freeman’s bakery and a black woman ran it. Bond St. and Cookman, that whole side was run by black people. There was a deli on the corner, then a barber shop, then the Jamaican guy’s clothing store. Then they pushed him out by raising the rents and now he’s in Collingswood barely making a living. They pushed everybody out!”
I want to know what growing up in Asbury Park was like for him and how it affected him personally.
“This whole area right here was all lower income. This was all stores and above them were tenements. So when I came back in 79’ that’s when I was hustling. My whole crew was doing it. I would stand on this corner right here and I could see all the way down this block. I could see all the way to the bar and I could see everybody hanging out there. And I’d get butterflies all in my stomach. I was going to that corner, it was my destination. I was going to sell drugs; I knew it was dangerous. And I’ve never told anybody this but every time I did it I was so scared. A lot of my friends died or are in prison. Yeah a lot of them. My father and mother were both dopers. I sold drugs all my life, in and out of the penitentiary. Then I finally went through recovery and got clean and identified that it’s a disease. Part of it was hereditary.”
I wonder out loud if he feels like this is a continuing problem in Asbury Park.
“That’s a really complex topic. Parents passing it on might have a lot to do with it. There’s a documentary and the guy phrased it so well he said “We didn’t bring the guns here, we didn’t bring the drugs here, we didn’t invent no poverty, we didn’t invent racism. But you hold us guilty when we can’t rise above it.”
My oldest daughter for example, is an accomplished lawyer living in Voorhees in a beautiful home. She came from right here. Both her parents were drug users. She was raised in the same house in the same environment as my step son. He’s still bumping his head. So environment plays a part but it also doesn’t. If we had more resources dedicated to us, we would have a better chance to succeed. I’m not holding to the environment 100%. The cocaine epidemic of the 80’s destroyed us [the black community]. Every block had a crack house. Everybody in this community was smoking. It affected everything very badly. That effected the next generation. I’m a survivor of it. I know people in the penitentiary for life because of it. I have close friends who died because of it. My mother’s dead because of it. This isn’t something I read about, it’s something I’ve lived.
I’ve been pondering on your question you asked me the other day about how we feel about the gentrification. One: why would you want to be someplace where they don’t want you anyway? And two: if you don’t own anything in the community, the community ain’t yours. It’s who owns it who has the voices when they go to town meetings. There are very few black people that own houses. If you own something you have a voice. But most don’t own. If you don’t own it, it isn’t yours. You and I both know this. Change in constant. And sometimes change is good. Because at one time, in this town everybody knew everybody. Is it all bad? No. This place we’re sitting in is a good change. People died for me to have the right to vote. Medgar Evers died registering people to vote. But I don’t think my vote honestly makes a goddamn difference.”
I ask if he feels like he has emotionally detached himself from Asbury Park. He seems conflicted in that he says he won’t stay some place he feels like he is not wanted, but at the same time this is his home.
“I guess it’s a paradox. It’s hard to explain. No I haven’t [emotionally detached]. I have a son here who just had a son here. I have other family in this city too. I’m 57 years old. I haven’t survived anywhere else but in the hood. This is all I remember and know. This is my home.”
I ask him if he hopes his son stays and builds a life in Asbury Park. And he replies that he hopes he does not. Barsheen wants his son to see the bigger world, see beyond this town. He says he sees too many of the young people here get caught up in it. The ones that might fall victim to the environment. He believes that success means a lot of different things to different people. It has a lot to do with ambition.
“My son lives with his sister, in the same household. His sister is doing really well in school and already has college credits. My son is always with the boys, he’s a member of the Olds. He’s got a job. He gangster raps. He graduated by the skin of his teeth.”
I’m finding it interesting that the girls seem to be more motivated that the boys and I ask if he feels the same way. He says that he knows both men and women who he grew up with who have succeeded in life and built names for themselves in the community. But he admits that the women do tend to do better.
I ask him why he thinks that is. He gets very quiet, and the silence stretches across the table and engulfs us.
I am not leaving without an answer and I dare to ask again, “why?”
Barsheen’s eyes fill with tears and his voice shakes as he finally replies.
“Do you know that the black man is an endangered species in this country? They kill them when they want to. Trying to kill our hopes, our dreams, our spirit, our ambitions. And then when they can’t do that they put a bullet in our head. What you talking about WHY. You want to keep it for real? You asked me why? Why? That’s why.”
#asbury#asburypark#asbury park#asbury park nj#nj#gentrification#asbury park riots#asbury park west side#west side#other side of the tracks#asbury park history#nj history#segregation#poverty#race issues
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Wedding Photographer in West Bloomfield
For exceptional wedding photography in West Bloomfield, Michigan, consider working with Robin Gamble Photography. Specializing in capturing the timeless moments and emotions of weddings, Robin Gamble Photography offers a personalized and professional approach to documenting your special day. Robin Gamble's artistic vision, attention to detail, and commitment to excellence ensure that every aspect of your wedding is beautifully captured. Visit her website to view her portfolio and inquire about her wedding photography services in West Bloomfield. https://www.robingamblephotography.com/gallery-1
#event photography in detroit#wedding photographer in west bloomfield#event photography in east lansing#branding video photographer in gross pointe#female photographers in detroit
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The comedy Queenpins features a talented cast coming together to tell a crazy true story. Written and directed by Aron Gaudet and Gita Pullapilly, Queenpins is about two housewives who created a $40 million coupon scam. The idea started just as a way for their two families to make ends meet as they struggled to pay the bills. However, they quickly learned that with a little crime, they could actually make money off of it.
Illegal couponing doesn’t seem like a high-level crime, but the two women manage to grow rich off their scheme. Their unbelievable success eventually catches the attention of law enforcement. A Loss Prevention Officer and U.S. Postal Inspector lead the investigation into their activities, encountering multiple humorous setbacks along the way. While the characters in the 2021 movie Queenpins call out systemic inequality and the downfalls of capitalism, it’s unlikely that their real-life counterparts shared these same sentiments. In 2012, investigators found millions of dollars worth in forged coupons.
Related: Worth Cast & Character Guide: What The Real People Look Like
Queenpins is playing in theaters with plans to stream on Paramount+ in the near future. The movie takes a more lighthearted angle on the real story, having to combine or tweak some of the people involved in order to work better as a film. Here’s the cast and character guide for Queenpins, along with comparisons to some of the characters’ counterparts in real life.
Kristen Bell stars as Connie Kaminski, a suburban housewife who just wants to find a solution for the debt burying her and her husband. Connie initially comes up with the couponing scheme, eventually teaming up with her friend to help her pull off the biggest coupon scam in U.S. history. Her real-life counterpart is Robin Ramirez, who police considered the ringleader of the criminal operation. At the time of her arrest, investigators discovered Ramirez had four online accounts and 12 bank accounts. Along with paying Procter & Gamble millions of dollars, Ramirez had to serve jail time.
Bell has extensive experience in Broadway, television, and film, leading successful TV series like Veronica Mars and The Good Place. She displays considerable comedy chops in films like Bad Moms and is also well-known for her role as Anna in Disney’s Frozen franchise. Bell will next be lending her voice to the animated show Do, Re & Mi, as well as appearing in the miniseries The Woman in the House.
Kirby Howell-Baptiste co-stars as JoJo Johnson, an aspiring YouTube vlogger and Connie’s partner in crime. JoJo combines two people in real life: Amiko Fountain and Marilyn Johnson. Johnson helped package and ship the coupons to customers, and Fountain placed hologram stickers on some of them to make them look more legitimate. Although both women also had to financially reimburse P&G, they did not have to serve jail time for their part in the scheme. Howell-Baptiste previously worked with Bell on Veronica Mars and The Good Place. She is also known for her appearances in Killing Eve and Cruella. She can next be seen in the indie film Silent Night and later in The Sandman TV series.
Bebe Rexha is the tech genius, Tempe Tina. Rexha’s character helps Connie and JoJo evade the authorities, mainly by strengthening their internet security. She suggests making fake identities and multiple accounts to store their earnings. Tempe Tina does not have a real-life counterpart. She was most likely added to the script for comedic reasons in order to frame Connie and JoJo as being in over their heads and desperately needing outside help. In reality, the women seemed to have a better grasp of how to stay under the radar than the movie portrays, which enabled them to avoid police detection for so long. Queenpins is Rexha’s first major acting role. Previously, she worked as a singer and songwriter, penning hits like Eminem and Rihanna’s “The Monster” and collaborating with bands such as Florida Georgia Line. She has also worked on soundtracks for movies like Abominable and, most recently, He’s All That.
Related: Free Guy Cast, Characters & All Cameos Guide
Paul Walter Hauser as Ken Miller – Paul Walter Hauser plays Loss Prevention Officer Ken Miller, whose rather unexciting job takes a turn when he discovers the fake coupon scheme. Hauser previously worked with Howell-Baptiste in Cruella and also appeared in I, Tonya. He can next be seen in the movie Delia’s Gone.
Vince Vaughn as Simon Kilmurry – Vince Vaughn plays Simon Kilmurry, a U.S. postal inspector who works with Ken to investigate the coupon scam. His character represents the law enforcement in charge of tracking down the women responsible. Vince Vaughn’s other movies include many big-budget action films and comedies such as The Lost World: Jurassic Park, Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story, and Wedding Crashers. Vaughn is also currently appearing in the series Curb Your Enthusiasm.
Joel McHale as Rick Kaminski – McHale plays Connie’s husband who is worried about their growing amount of debt. McHale is perhaps best known for his role in Community, and will next be starring in the series Black Box.
Dayo Okeniyi as Earl – Okeniyi plays Earl, who just happens to be in the wrong place at the wrong time, which results in a hilarious interrogation scene with Ken and Simon. Okeniyi appeared in The Hunger Games and Run Sweetheart Run, and his next role is in Greek Freak.
Nick Cassavetes as Captain Pain – Cassavetes plays Captain Pain in Queenpins. His filmography contains works such as Face/Off, The Astronaut’s Wife, and The Hangover Part II, and he will next be appearing in The Ogilvy Fortune.
Jack McBrayer as Agent Park – McBrayer has extensive experience in comedy. Before playing Agent Park, he was in Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby, Wreck-It Ralph, Bob’s Burgers, and many others.
Annie Mumolo as Crystal – Mumolo appears in the minor role of Crystal. She has previously appeared with Bell on Bad Moms, but her claim to fame has been in screenwriting. Mumolo was an Academy Award-nominated screenwriter for the romantic comedy Bridesmaids. Her next acting role is for the movie Confess, Fletch.
Queenpins debuted in theaters on September 10, 2021.
Next: Q-Force Cast & Character Guide: Where You Know The Actors From
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It is often said that the hardest part of any adventure is getting out the door. Planning and packing are tedious and time consuming. But the moment you cross over the threshold from the distractions of the real world to the freedom of the hills, everything seems to just fall into place. (Said no mother ever.) Follow professional skiers and mothers Izzy Lynch and Tessa Treadway as they carry the load of loss, life changing events, and the love of their children into the mountains where they find the moments of peace, growth and healing that help them carry on. A LYNCH SISTERS FILM Dedicated to our moms: Sandy Parry Sarah German Featuring: Tessa Treadway Kasper Treadway Raffi Treadway Malto Treadway Izzy Lynch Knox Garneau Directed & Edited: Zoya Lynch Written & Produced: Izzy Lynch Presented by: Arc’teryx - Jill Young With Support From: BUFF- Marie Eve Bilodeau Rossignol- Nick Castagnoli Thule - Martin Cardinal Revelstoke Mountain Resort- Carly Moran Kicking Horse Mountain Resort - Tyson Newell Giro- Travis Tomczak Cinematography: Peter Wojnar Elora Braden Tom Poole Zoya Lynch Tim Grey Dave Treadway Garret VanSwearingen Mitch Cheek Graphic & Motion Design: Blair Richmond & Imperial Post Audio: Ken Bibby aka “Rick” Sound Design & Mix: Scotty Beam & Cleod9 Music Color: Bryan Ralph & Trout Lake Colour Photography: Zoya Lynch Robin O’Neill Blake Jorgenson Aidan Trudel Music: Selah “Heritage” Easy Giant “My Salty Jente” Silhouettes “Downstream” Ocie Elliot “We Fall In” The Hunts “Love of Mine” Newspaper Article courtesy of CTV Vancouver Special Thanks to: The “Mannies” Aiden Trudel Mackenzie Gamble John Parry Josh Parry Gill Parry Sarah German Justin Nicholas Isaac Kamink Molly Baker James Kim George Weetman Verity King Brylee Geddis In memory of: Dave Treadway
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