Nash first picked up a camera when he was 5 or 6 years old. Doug was coaching Jensen’s soccer game, and Nash started taking photos with his mother’s camera. When the family viewed the pictures later, they were amazed.
Nash became a fixture at Jensen’s football games. He had a special talent for getting the perfect shot. Winning touchdowns, smiling cheerleaders—Nash captured the tiny moments that made each game special.
Hannah White is a professional photographer and the wife of a coach at Franklin High. She noticed Nash taking photos at a game one day, and the two became fast friends.
White was impressed with Nash’s work. “He just has this ability to capture people’s personalities in a single moment,” she says.
Soon other teams wanted Nash to take photos at their games. People asked him to photograph graduation parties. Kids made his photos their profile pictures on social media.
White noticed how important Nash was to the community, and it gave her an exciting idea. With a better camera lens, Nash could take even higher-quality photos.
Without telling the Pils family, White started collecting money from the community— and within just a few hours, she had raised the $2,000 cost of the new lens. “I wanted Nash to know that he’s an important part of the team,” she says.