I’m Josh Mullins.
My photography is designed to stop the scroll, turn heads, and hold space — not briefly, but intentionally. It’s what naturally happens when a moment is treated like it matters.
In this digital age, most images exist for a fraction of a second, and are gone before anyone realizes what they were.
Your images should pull the viewer in and give them something to ponder, not beg for a glance. Yes, I will pose you, but more importantly, build the environment around you.
Every meeting is collaborative. Every frame deliberate. I pay attention to how people move, how they carry themselves, how energy shifts in a space. This is why the photography feels bold, alive and why it lasts.
If you’re looking for something safe, familiar, or expected, I’m probably not the photographer for you. But if you believe moments matter, if you want images that carry weight and if you’re drawn to work that feels intentional and alive, then you’re in the right place.
I’m a creative photographer focused on senior portraits, senior sports photography, athlete portraits, and bold creative work for brands and individuals who want to stand out.
in my freetime
Free time, for me, isn’t about disconnecting. It’s about staying curious and present with the ones you love and enjoying every moment together.
That looks like wandering through estate sales with no real plan, just seeing what turns up. Playing board games with friends — especially Everdell — where time disappears without anyone checking a phone.
Making homemade chili and settling in under a warm blanket. Working through an Adventure Challenge book, not for the outcome, but for the experience of doing something together.
It’s music on in the background — usually Ben Rector. Rock climbing when I need to clear my head and trust the next move. Tacos — specifically Taco Buddha — because some things don’t need improving.
And more often than not, it’s sitting in a coffee shop with my wife Lindsey, talking, working, or saying nothing at all.
These are the reasons presence matters so much in my work. When you slow down, pay attention, and actually live inside a moment, you start to recognize when it’s worth holding onto.
