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People { 50 images } Created 24 Sep 2019

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  • Made in Greensboro - JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals<br />
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Photographed , Friday, October 16, 2015, in Greensboro, N.C.<br />
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Keenan Smith: “I’m a multi-dimensional individual right now”<br />
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Bio: As an athlete, full-time student at NC A&T and the COO of Little Brown Box Works, an imaginative think tank concerned with pushing the world forward by disrupting technology, Keenan juggles classes, business meetings and athletic training all in a day’s work.
    001pv_MIG_keenan_smith_BC8U1530.JPG
  • Joe Rotondi, maker and executive director for The Forge, a makerspace, Tuesday, October 20, 2015, in Greensboro, N.C.<br />
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JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals<br />
<br />
Joe stumbled upon a group of makers at a local coffee shop, brainstorming ideas on forming their own makerspace, a space where people can come together to create, invent and learn. He couldn’t stop himself from getting involved. What started as subscribing to their e-newsletter later led to a huge career opportunity.<br />
 <br />
Now Joe’s the maestro of The Forge, the city’s only space that connects makers with equipment, mentors and resources that would otherwise be quite costly. It’s home to a full wood working shop and soft space that includes 3D printers. The Forge “lowers the barriers of entry in creativity and new ideas.”
    001_pv_MIG_joe_rotondi_BC8U2993.JPG
  • Jessica Mashburn performs at Print Works Bistro, Wednesday, October 21, 2015, in Greensboro, N.C. <br />
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JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals<br />
<br />
Singer/Songwriter Jessica Mashburn grew up surrounded by music.  She had musical influences coming from all different directions and by age 5, she was singing and performing at family gatherings.<br />
 <br />
“My favorite kind of music is live music,” she explained, “Anything that causes me to laugh or smile or have a good time.” Jessica takes those feelings and tries to emulate them in her performances. “I generate it into something I can bring back to Greensboro with my own twist.” 
    004_pv_MIG_jessica_mashburn_BC8U5162.JPG
  • Jessica Mashburn performs at Print Works Bistro, Wednesday, October 21, 2015, in Greensboro, N.C. <br />
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JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals<br />
<br />
Singer/Songwriter Jessica Mashburn grew up surrounded by music.  She had musical influences coming from all different directions and by age 5, she was singing and performing at family gatherings.<br />
 <br />
“My favorite kind of music is live music,” she explained, “Anything that causes me to laugh or smile or have a good time.” Jessica takes those feelings and tries to emulate them in her performances. “I generate it into something I can bring back to Greensboro with my own twist.” 
    006_pv_MIG_jessica_mashburn_BC8U4968.JPG
  • 009_pv_MIG_jessica_mashburn_BC8U5272.JPG
  • Jessica Mashburn performs at Print Works Bistro, Wednesday, October 21, 2015, in Greensboro, N.C. <br />
<br />
JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals<br />
<br />
Singer/Songwriter Jessica Mashburn grew up surrounded by music.  She had musical influences coming from all different directions and by age 5, she was singing and performing at family gatherings.<br />
 <br />
“My favorite kind of music is live music,” she explained, “Anything that causes me to laugh or smile or have a good time.” Jessica takes those feelings and tries to emulate them in her performances. “I generate it into something I can bring back to Greensboro with my own twist.” 
    007_pv_MIG_jessica_mashburn_BC8U5224.JPG
  • Jessica Mashburn performs at Print Works Bistro, Wednesday, October 21, 2015, in Greensboro, N.C. <br />
<br />
JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals<br />
<br />
Singer/Songwriter Jessica Mashburn grew up surrounded by music.  She had musical influences coming from all different directions and by age 5, she was singing and performing at family gatherings.<br />
 <br />
“My favorite kind of music is live music,” she explained, “Anything that causes me to laugh or smile or have a good time.” Jessica takes those feelings and tries to emulate them in her performances. “I generate it into something I can bring back to Greensboro with my own twist.” 
    008_pv_MIG_jessica_mashburn_BC8U5181.JPG
  • Emmanuel Malette practices in the Mary Channing Coleman Building on the UNCG campus, Thursday, October 22, 2015, in Greensboro, N.C. <br />
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JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals<br />
<br />
When Emmanuel was a teenager, he went through lots of hard family situations. He needed an escape. That’s when he turned to dance. Emmanuel describes his love with dance as being a safe haven.<br />
 <br />
Growing up, he didn’t have the money to pay for dance lessons so he would watch YouTube videos to try to pick things up from there. He would also dance with his cousin each summer.<br />
 <br />
Emmanuel is now a senior at UNCG studying dance concentrating on performance and choreography. He loves all styles of dance but is most experienced in hip-hop and contemporary styles. Emmanuel also teaches dance classes at Artistic Motion.<br />
 
    11__pv_MIG_e_malette_BC8U7927.JPG
  • Emmanuel Malette practices in the Mary Channing Coleman Building on the UNCG campus, Thursday, October 22, 2015, in Greensboro, N.C. <br />
<br />
SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH and JERRY WOLFORD / Perfecta Visuals<br />
<br />
When Emmanuel was a teenager, he went through lots of hard family situations. He needed an escape. That’s when he turned to dance. Emmanuel describes his love with dance as being a safe haven.<br />
 <br />
Growing up, he didn’t have the money to pay for dance lessons so he would watch YouTube videos to try to pick things up from there. He would also dance with his cousin each summer.<br />
 <br />
Emmanuel is now a senior at UNCG studying dance concentrating on performance and choreography. He loves all styles of dance but is most experienced in hip-hop and contemporary styles. Emmanuel also teaches dance classes at Artistic Motion.<br />
 
    12__pv_MIG_e_malette_BC8U8029-2.JPG
  • Pattern maker Cora Outling, at VF corp, Thursday, October 22, 2015, in Greensboro, N.C.<br />
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JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals<br />
<br />
By the age of four, Cora Outling was a fashion designer. For her dolls that is. By six, she had her very own sewing machine and the rest was history. <br />
 <br />
Today she is a pattern maker at VF Corp., a $12 billion apparel and footwear powerhouse. In this role she has to be very creative. “You can design anything, but it may not be possible or cost effective,” she explains, “So I have to make it possible… or steer it in the direction to make it possible.”
    004_pv_MIG_cora_outlingBC8U6842.JPG
  • Pattern maker Cora Outling, at VF corp, Thursday, October 22, 2015, in Greensboro, N.C.<br />
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JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals<br />
<br />
By the age of four, Cora Outling was a fashion designer. For her dolls that is. By six, she had her very own sewing machine and the rest was history. <br />
 <br />
Today she is a pattern maker at VF Corp., a $12 billion apparel and footwear powerhouse. In this role she has to be very creative. “You can design anything, but it may not be possible or cost effective,” she explains, “So I have to make it possible… or steer it in the direction to make it possible.”
    001_pv_MIG_cora_outlingBC8U6990.JPG
  • Pattern maker Cora Outling, at VF corp, Thursday, October 22, 2015, in Greensboro, N.C.<br />
<br />
JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals<br />
<br />
By the age of four, Cora Outling was a fashion designer. For her dolls that is. By six, she had her very own sewing machine and the rest was history. <br />
 <br />
Today she is a pattern maker at VF Corp., a $12 billion apparel and footwear powerhouse. In this role she has to be very creative. “You can design anything, but it may not be possible or cost effective,” she explains, “So I have to make it possible… or steer it in the direction to make it possible.”
    003_pv_MIG_cora_outlingBC8U7009.JPG
  • Latifa Aboeid in her STEM Early College at NC A&T chemistry classroom, Tuesday, November 3, 2015, in Greensboro, N.C.<br />
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JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals<br />
<br />
Some kids say they want to be a firefighter, an astronaut or a teacher when they grow up.<br />
 <br />
By fourth grade, Latifa Aboeid knew that she would be a surgeon.<br />
 <br />
“I go back and forth between neurosurgeon and general surgeon, but I know I’ll go to med school,” she says.<br />
 <br />
The dream isn’t very far out from reach. At just 17, Latifa has nearly two years of college credits on her transcript, thanks to the STEM Early College at NC A&T, a new tuition-free Guilford County public high school. She is on track to start medical school by age 19.<br />
 <br />
The early college is academically rigorous, and Latifa’s a top student. She is researching insulin resistance in Type 1 Diabetes in addition to her regular course load.<br />
 
    03_pv_MIG_l_aboeid_BC8U1159.JPG
  • Latifa Aboeid in her STEM Early College at NC A&T chemistry classroom, Tuesday, November 3, 2015, in Greensboro, N.C.<br />
<br />
JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals<br />
<br />
Some kids say they want to be a firefighter, an astronaut or a teacher when they grow up.<br />
 <br />
By fourth grade, Latifa Aboeid knew that she would be a surgeon.<br />
 <br />
“I go back and forth between neurosurgeon and general surgeon, but I know I’ll go to med school,” she says.<br />
 <br />
The dream isn’t very far out from reach. At just 17, Latifa has nearly two years of college credits on her transcript, thanks to the STEM Early College at NC A&T, a new tuition-free Guilford County public high school. She is on track to start medical school by age 19.<br />
 <br />
The early college is academically rigorous, and Latifa’s a top student. She is researching insulin resistance in Type 1 Diabetes in addition to her regular course load.<br />
 
    04_pv_MIG_l_aboeid_BC8U1012.JPG
  • Latifa Aboeid in her STEM Early College at NC A&T chemistry classroom, Tuesday, November 3, 2015, in Greensboro, N.C.<br />
<br />
JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals<br />
<br />
Some kids say they want to be a firefighter, an astronaut or a teacher when they grow up.<br />
 <br />
By fourth grade, Latifa Aboeid knew that she would be a surgeon.<br />
 <br />
“I go back and forth between neurosurgeon and general surgeon, but I know I’ll go to med school,” she says.<br />
 <br />
The dream isn’t very far out from reach. At just 17, Latifa has nearly two years of college credits on her transcript, thanks to the STEM Early College at NC A&T, a new tuition-free Guilford County public high school. She is on track to start medical school by age 19.<br />
 <br />
The early college is academically rigorous, and Latifa’s a top student. She is researching insulin resistance in Type 1 Diabetes in addition to her regular course load.<br />
 
    07_pv_MIG_l_aboeid_BC8U1379.JPG
  • Olivia Mungal, an indie film director,  at the The Starr Theatre, Friday, November 6, 2015, in Greensboro, N.C.<br />
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JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals<br />
<br />
<br />
She’s a marketing manager on the weekdays. But on the weekend end she’s Olivia Mungal, indie film director. <br />
 <br />
The XX-year-old spends her Saturdays and Sundays filming short movies in and around Greensboro with her friends, who are also members of her production team.<br />
 <br />
It’s a hobby, and a passion.<br />
 <br />
“It is something that we have all kind of become addicted to and it’s a growing passion for us,” she says.<br />
 <br />
Each year Olivia and her team participate in the 48-hour film festival, an international film festival competition where they are given 48 hours to write, film and edit a movie.
    03_pv_MIG_o_mungal BC8U2307.JPG
  • Roscoe Guitars' Jacob Durham. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    001_pv_j_durham_BC8U3284.JPG
  • Irving Allen at the Greensboro Four statue on the North Carolina State University campus, Monday, January 4, 2014, in Greensboro, N.C. Allen's uncle, David Richmond, is on the far left. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    003_pv_i_allen_BC8U2078.JPG
  • Irving Allen at the Greensboro Four statue on the North Carolina State University campus, Monday, January 4, 2014, in Greensboro, N.C. Allen's uncle, David Richmond, is on the far left. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    005_pv_i_allen_BC8U2220.JPG
  • Gabrielle Rodgers, a junior at  North Carolina A&T State University, in the Manufacturing Lab in Graham Hall on the A&T campus, January 26, 2016. Originally from Maryland, she is the first person in her family to pursue post-secondary education. In addition to studying at the College of Engineering, Gabrielle is a Resident Advisor and a member of the Honors Program. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    002_pv_g_rodgers_BC8U4760.JPG
  • Emily Helm likes to use the downtown area for her fashion shoots, Thursday, February 18, 2016, in Greensboro, N.C.<br />
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Emily Helm began the fashion blog Life With Emily in 2011 during her junior year of college at Appalachian State University. Now, the 25-year-old Greensboro resident routinely shares her fashion style with over 65,000 social media followers.
    014_pv_mig_emily_helm_BC8U9532.JPG
  • Whitney Way Thore in the downtown area, Monday, February 22, 2016, in Greensboro, N.C. <br />
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Whitney Way Thore first gained recognition for her viral YouTube video series, “A Fat Girl Dancing” in January 2014. As a body-positive activist and self-love advocate, Whitney founded the No Body Shame Campaign to help men and women of every variety live their lives free of shame. The mission of the No Body Shame campaign is to help every individual overcome the debilitating effects of societal-induced shame. Currently, she stars in the TLC reality show My Big Fat Fabulous Life. Also, she is writing her first book titled I Do It With the Lights On to be published by Random House in 2016. She lives in her hometown of Greensboro, North Carolina.<br />
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JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    011_pv_MIG_w_thor_BC8U0799.JPG
  • Whitney Way Thore in the downtown area, Monday, February 22, 2016, in Greensboro, N.C. <br />
<br />
Whitney Way Thore first gained recognition for her viral YouTube video series, “A Fat Girl Dancing” in January 2014. As a body-positive activist and self-love advocate, Whitney founded the No Body Shame Campaign to help men and women of every variety live their lives free of shame. The mission of the No Body Shame campaign is to help every individual overcome the debilitating effects of societal-induced shame. Currently, she stars in the TLC reality show My Big Fat Fabulous Life. Also, she is writing her first book titled I Do It With the Lights On to be published by Random House in 2016. She lives in her hometown of Greensboro, North Carolina.<br />
<br />
JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    012_pv_MIG_w_thor_BC8U0897.JPG
  • The James B. Dudley High School Advanced Vehicle Technologies or “AVT” Team in their shop located on the Dudley High campus, March 5, 2016, in Greensboro, N.C. The unique program prepares students to take part in the Shell Eco-marathon, a competition where student teams from around the world design, build, test and drive ultra-energy-efficient vehicles. The team, lead by program founder and Dudley teacher Rick Lewis, prides themselves on hard work, overcoming challenges, and for creatively building vehicles out of re-used and re-purposed parts.
    01_pv_MIG_dudley_avt_BC8U2201.JPG
  • While away from his day job as an engineer for automotive giant Volvo, Will Oakley is able to focus on a different mode of transportation. Oakley spends his spare time carefully cutting, assembling and lacquering strips of wood into custom boats in the shop behind his Greensboro, N.C. home. Upon completion of a project, Will always enjoys testing his new vessel (be it a canoe or kayak) in one of the local Greensboro lakes, as he did here in Lake Brandt on Saturday, April 23, 2014, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    001_MIG_pv_w_oakley _BC8U6180.JPG
  • Caitlyn Holt works in technical product development for Cone Denim. Holt researches and develops the fabric, from the yarn up, that will turn into clothes for international markets. The flagship mill of Cone Denim’s operation is the 110-year-old White Oak plant, named for the 200-year-old tree that stood nearby and served as a gathering place. Often when Holt is developing new products she can look into the past for inspiration. She can dive into the mill’s FOUND Collection, an  archive of historical Cone Denim garments collected from throughout the country. Holt was photographed at the White Oak Mill and the attached Archive and Design Studio located in Greensboro, N.C. on April 25, 2016. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    005___MIG_pv_c_holt _BC8U6596.JPG
  • Background: Cone Denim's American Draper X3 looms weaving authentic vintage selvage denim.<br />
<br />
Caitlyn Holt works in technical product development for Cone Denim. Holt researches and develops the fabric, from the yarn up, that will turn into clothes for international markets. The flagship mill of Cone Denim’s operation is the 110-year-old White Oak plant, named for the 200-year-old tree that stood nearby and served as a gathering place. Often when Holt is developing new products she can look into the past for inspiration. She can dive into the mill’s FOUND Collection, an  archive of historical Cone Denim garments collected from throughout the country. Holt was photographed at the White Oak Mill and the attached Archive and Design Studio located in Greensboro, N.C. on April 25, 2016. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    002___MIG_pv_c_holt _BC8U6479.JPG
  • George Scheer swings on Elsewhere's "sidewalk swings" on S. Elm St. , Friday, June 17, 2016, in Greensboro, N.C. George Scheer III is the co-founder and Director of Elsewhere, a living museum and artist residency set in a former thrift store in downtown Greensboro, NC. Since opening in 2003, Elsewhere has supported creative projects, learning initiatives, and public works with both global and local artists. Guests are invited to interact with all of the material housed in the three-story Elm Street structure, however nothing is for sale or permanent display. Scheer holds an MA in Critical Theory and Visual Culture from Duke University and a BA from the University of Pennsylvania in Political Communications. <br />
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JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    002_BC8U8756.JPG
  • MANDATORY Photo Credit Jerry Wolford and Scott Muthersbaugh / Perfecta Visuals <br />
<br />
Made in Greensboro photos are for the exclusive use of promoting the Made in Greensboro project. We are releasing the photos for usage in the 2016 Greensboro Thrives magazine for page footers, with both logo and website, and usage in a one-page overview. These photos are for one time use only. All other use is prohibited without the consent of Perfecta Visuals and Action Greensboro. Photos must be purged from archive after publication. Copyright Perfecta Visuals  2015/2016.<br />
<br />
Joshua Cook, a superintendent for<br />
Frank L. Blum Construction Company after his long day in the summer heat working at the LeBauer City Park site in, Thursday, July 14, 2016, in Greensboro, N.C. He says he looks forward to seeing his children, ages 2 and 4, play in the park one day . When Carolyn Weill LeBauer died in 2012, she left $10 million to the Community Foundation of Greater Greensboro to finance a park. The park was designed by landscape architect Nathan Elliott, from the Office of James Burnett in Solano Beach, Calif. <br />
JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    016_pv_MIG_j_cook_BC8U4891_final.JPG
  • Joshua Cook, a superintendent for<br />
Frank L. Blum Construction Company after his long day in the summer heat working at the LeBauer City Park site in, Thursday, July 14, 2016, in Greensboro, N.C. He says he looks forward to seeing his children, ages 2 and 4, play in the park one day . When Carolyn Weill LeBauer died in 2012, she left $10 million to the Community Foundation of Greater Greensboro to finance a park. The park was designed by landscape architect Nathan Elliott, from the Office of James Burnett in Solano Beach, Calif. <br />
JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    011_pv_MIG_j_cook_BC8U4758.JPG
  • Joshua Cook, a superintendent for<br />
Frank L. Blum Construction Company after his long day in the summer heat working at the LeBauer City Park site in, Thursday, July 14, 2016, in Greensboro, N.C. He says he looks forward to seeing his children, ages 2 and 4, play in the park one day . When Carolyn Weill LeBauer died in 2012, she left $10 million to the Community Foundation of Greater Greensboro to finance a park. The park was designed by landscape architect Nathan Elliott, from the Office of James Burnett in Solano Beach, Calif. <br />
JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    007_pv_MIG_j_cook_BC8U4681.JPG
  • Singer/songwriter Laurelyn Dossett at her home, Friday, September 2, 2016, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals<br />
<br />
Singer/songwriter Laurelyn Dossett lives and writes in the piedmont of North Carolina, and her songs tend to reflect the stories of the region, both traditional and contemporary. One of the most sought-after voices in creative collaborations, she has toured with Rhiannon Giddens, folk legend Alice Gerrard and composer/violinist Daniel Bernard Roumain. She premiered composer Kenneth Frazelle’s song cycle, Songs in the Rear View Mirror, and has toured with the North Carolina Symphony. She has appeared on Prairie Home Companion and at various music festivals with Polecat Creek, a band she co-founded with Kari Sickenberger.
    001_pv_l_dossett_MIG_BC8U0521.JPG
  • Mindy Oakley is the Executive Director of the Edward M. Armfield, Sr. Foundation, based in Greensboro, NC. Her foundation supports local community and education-based initiatives including Say Yes Guilford and individual student scholarships. They also donated $1 million to fund the commission of “Where We Met,” a sculpture by Janet Echelman that anchors the new LeBauer City Park in downtown Greensboro. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    007_MIG_mindy_oakley_BC8U6446.JPG
  • Kenneth Ruff is the Director of University Bands at North Carolina A&T State University. Ruff holds a bachelor’s degree in Music Education and Masters Degree in Educational Administration and Supervision from North Carolina A&T State University and served as a drum major while in attendance at the school. He also earned a master’s degree in Music Education and a doctorate in Education from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.<br />
Dr. Ruff has overseen the Blue and Gold Marching Machine since 2003. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    001_MIG_kenneth_ruff_aggie_band_BC8U...JPG
  • Sam Rouse has always had an interest in woodworking, but fully embraced that passion after graduating from college. It was then that he moved with his expectant wife to Scotland to attend the Chippendale International School of Furniture for a year.<br />
Inspired by his newborn daughter, Sam wanted his first professional piece of furniture to be dedicated to her in the form of a boat shaped cradle. Rouse utilizes the resources at The Forge in downtown Greensboro to create his works.<br />
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Photographed at The Forge, Thursday, December 8, 2016, in Greensboro, N.C. <br />
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JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    006_pv_MIG_s_rouse _BC8U0245.JPG
  • Danny Mackey grew up in Marlboro, NY, but came south to attend Greensboro College. Upon graduation, he spent 5 more years at Greensboro College as their Director of Student Activities. Additionally, he is an agent with Neon Entertainment, a talent representation firm based in New York. However, Mackey is best know for his baseball alter ego, Spaz. He has been the on-field host for the Greensboro Grasshoppers since 2004.<br />
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Photographed, Monday, March 20, 2017, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    02_MIG_danny_SPAZ_mackey_BC8U6815.JPG
  • Danny Mackey grew up in Marlboro, NY, but came south to attend Greensboro College. Upon graduation, he spent 5 more years at Greensboro College as their Director of Student Activities. Additionally, he is an agent with Neon Entertainment, a talent representation firm based in New York. However, Mackey is best know for his baseball alter ego, Spaz. He has been the on-field host for the Greensboro Grasshoppers since 2004.<br />
<br />
Photographed, Monday, March 20, 2017, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    05_MIG_danny_SPAZ_mackey_BC8U6889.JPG
  • Danny Mackey grew up in Marlboro, NY, but came south to attend Greensboro College. Upon graduation, he spent 5 more years at Greensboro College as their Director of Student Activities. Additionally, he is an agent with Neon Entertainment, a talent representation firm based in New York. However, Mackey is best know for his baseball alter ego, Spaz. He has been the on-field host for the Greensboro Grasshoppers since 2004.<br />
<br />
Photographed, Monday, March 20, 2017, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    12_MIG_danny_SPAZ_mackey_BC8U6948_f.JPG
  • Danny Mackey grew up in Marlboro, NY, but came south to attend Greensboro College. Upon graduation, he spent 5 more years at Greensboro College as their Director of Student Activities. Additionally, he is an agent with Neon Entertainment, a talent representation firm based in New York. However, Mackey is best know for his baseball alter ego, Spaz. He has been the on-field host for the Greensboro Grasshoppers since 2004.<br />
<br />
Photographed, Monday, March 20, 2017, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    13_MIG_danny_SPAZ_mackey_BC8U7025-3.JPG
  • Brothers Jay and Tom Jung work together at ThinkCreate. They teamed up to create the Cadillac Service Garage event center, located at 304 E. Market St. in downtown Greensboro. The building was originally constructed in 1922 and was the longtime home of Carolina Cadillac Co. before the name changed to Black Cadillac — a classic downtown building where classic cars were bought and sold. While the Jungs won’t disclose their total investment, they report that is has been at least $2 million. The event space has been open since the spring of 2017.<br />
<br />
Photographed, Wednesday, July 26, 2017, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    008_MIG_jung_brothers_0a8a3164.JPG
  • Bob Page founded Replacements, Ltd. in 1981 and has dedicated the past 36 years to helping people discover rare place settings and dinnerware. Starting out, Bob quit his job as an auditor for the state of North Carolina and ran a small store out of his attic. It is now the world’s largest retailer of old and new china, crystal, silver, and collectibles with more than 12 million pieces of inventory from more than 420,000 patterns. Tour patrons can inquire about patterns and shop the 12,000-square foot showroom and museum.<br />
<br />
Photographed, Wednesday, August 23, 2017, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    004_MIG_bob_page_rep_limited_0A8A861...JPG
  • Burney Jennings is the CEO of Biscuitville FRESH SOUTHERN. The company has 54 locations in two states. Jennings is an Elon University graduate and took over the company after his father.<br />
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Photographed, Tuesday, October 3, 2017, in Whitsett, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Born in Cuba and raised in Spain, Felix Semper was a Greensboro custom home builder when the housing crisis hit in 2008. He had always been creative and artistic. He loved to sketch. So he started teaching himself how to paint. Soon he was selling the paintings, and opened a studio in Revolution Mills. Felix’s expandable art work evokes pop culture and pop art. He’s made busts of icons like the Notorious B.I.G. and sculptures of potato chip bags or Cheez-It boxes, made from 7,000 sheets of paper. He’s inspired by Pablo Picasso and Jean-Michel Basquiat, as well as things around him.<br />
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Photographed, Friday, October 20, 2017, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD  / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Born in Cuba and raised in Spain, Felix Semper was a Greensboro custom home builder when the housing crisis hit in 2008. He had always been creative and artistic. He loved to sketch. So he started teaching himself how to paint. Soon he was selling the paintings, and opened a studio in Revolution Mills. Felix’s expandable art work evokes pop culture and pop art. He’s made busts of icons like the Notorious B.I.G. and sculptures of potato chip bags or Cheez-It boxes, made from 7,000 sheets of paper. He’s inspired by Pablo Picasso and Jean-Michel Basquiat, as well as things around him.<br />
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Photographed, Friday, October 20, 2017, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD  / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Dunia Fleihan had been preparing for her career as a small business advocate for her entire working life. She grew up running the register and taking lunch orders at her family’s small business: Greensboro beloved Mediterranean food joint, Ghassan’s. It was one of those Ghassan’s customers who first turned Dunia on to Triad Local First, a nonprofit membership organization that supports locally-owned businesses. She first joined as a volunteer to help promote the group, and now works as its operations manager.<br />
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Photographed, Wednesday, November 15, 2017, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Dom-Sebastian Alexis is the founder of TheBBoyBallet in Greensboro, NC.<br />
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Photographed, Wednesday, December 6, 2017, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Dom-Sebastian Alexis is the founder of TheBBoyBallet in Greensboro, NC.<br />
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Photographed, Wednesday, December 6, 2017, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Nancy Vaughan is the newly re-elected mayor of Greensboro.<br />
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Photographed, Friday, December 22, 2017, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Nancy Vaughan is the newly re-elected mayor of Greensboro.<br />
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Photographed, Friday, December 22, 2017, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Nancy Vaughan is the newly re-elected mayor of Greensboro.<br />
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Photographed, Friday, December 22, 2017, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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