The wheels on her bus were going round and round but Lorraine Kraayenbrink just didn’t feel like she was getting anywhere. Instead, she turned to her first love: photography. “I was caught up in a job as a school bus driver that I really didn’t think was going to get me anywhere,” Lorraine says. “And since I had a love of art and design I wanted an outlet for that.” Lorraine quit her job driving a school bus and went back to school.
Lorraine, a single mother of three, enrolled at Lambton College at 43 years old and suddenly life took on new meaning. “It was a bit nerve-wracking, but I was desperate at the time. I just felt like if I’m going to do it, I need to do it now. The experience has been awesome.” Lorraine now runs her own business, Kraayenbrink Photography, and delights in taking family photos as well as pictures at special occasions including weddings. “I wanted to do weddings, but I was nervous to do them on my own. I contacted a friend, a fellow student, and we partnered up. It’s nice to have two people working a wedding because it’s not all on one person to capture every moment.”Turning to photography seemed like a natural course for a woman who claims she has been a shutterbug for years. “I have loved photography since I was very young. I just love the part where I can capture something that I had in my head and I could try to put it on film.” While things look a little different today with the instantaneous results on a digital camera, Lorraine still fondly remembers her film days. “Part of the excitement back then was the waiting to see if what you saw in your mind’s eye actually transposed onto the film. It was exciting.”
Lorraine recalls doing a number of photo projects in grade school and taking a photography course in high school. She also took a land design course that had a photography element to it. When she’s not working, Lorraine can be found cruising along the St. Clair River trying to get a photo of an eagle. “People are sending me reports of where they are seeing eagles and I always want to get a really good yearly shot of one,” Lorraine says. “An excellent bird shot really gets my blood pumping!”
Interacting with people is one of the perks of Lorraine's new career. “One of the biggest compliments I could get is when people say to me, ‘Wow! That was way more fun than I thought it was going to be'. They will tell me the pictures are awesome before they have even seen them. That is an incredible compliment.” Lorraine remains very proud of an award she won during her first year of college for a picture she took of a lighthouse. “The lighthouse represents me,” Lorrain says. “Out there alone, yet shining its light.”
In 1976, after twenty-three years in the produce business, Albert Troiani started Sarnia Produce. Today, his sons Dean and Mark run the company. Albert immigrated to Canada from Italy in 1952 and accepted a position with National Grocers. Within weeks he became the manager of the produce division.
If you are listening to radio in Sarnia-Lambton, chances are that you are listening to a Blackburn radio station. The fifth generation of the Blackburn family currently owns the company, which operates Sarnia-Lambton stations CHOK, The Fox and K106.3. They are a family with a long history in the med
Elaine Hayter came to lend a hand with the Sarnia-Lambton Chapter of the Kidney Foundation and stayed because of the friends she has made. Hayter, the senior development manager of the Foundation, joined the organization in 1986 as a volunteer and later joined the board. I started helping out with
You could be looking the enemy right in the eye and not know it is there. Such is the life of those who are fighting to eliminate phragmites (pronounced frag-migh-tees). Nobody knows this better than Nancy Vidler, chairperson of the Lambton Shores Phragmites Community Group (LSPCG). It is invasive
Jenn and Tyler Armstrong opened Twisted Arm in 2017. "Come on in, sit right down" is a lyric from Jenn’s favourite band, The Tragically Hip, which also inspired the restaurant's name. "After 12 years of owning and operating Norm’s...
Adam Veen's lifelong hobby has turned out to be one of the hottest new businesses in Lambton County. The 36-year-old owner of Oil Town Brewing Co. has been growing vegetables and using them to make various dishes since he was a child and now his hot sauce is the talk of the town. Our family has
In 2012, John and Holly Willis decided to open up their own restaurant. "One that would 'Truly be made in Sarnia' for Sarnia," says John Willis. This was not a corporation, so by relying on their own ingenuity and help from close...
St. Joseph's Hospice was created in 2005 in the wake of the closing of St. Joseph's Hospital. Since 1944, St. Joseph's had provided healthcare services to Sarnia-Lambton and they wished to continue to do so by meeting an existing gap in end-of-life care to the terminally ill and their families.