I'll 'fess up--I'm the lone "dislike them all" vote.
Guess it's an occupational hazard from being a retired creative director who's overseen the design of hundreds of logos, and in the process, "trashed" tens of thousands.
So the following observations are not intended to upset you or infuriate you--just my honest feedback for a very important, critical piece of self-identification for your business.
"Photographer" conveys artistic--even commercial photographers, and your logo just doesn't convey "artistic." Probably several reasons why it doesn't, in my opinion.
1. Serif typefaces typically work best for conservative or "left brain" type businesses/individuals. Not always, but it's normally a safe route, even though you'll rarely meet the business that will ADMIT to being stodgy or conservative.
Sans serif typefaces often time offer you more freedom and expression when you manipulate them.
If you are love with the typeface, you might try some vertical scaling up to around 130% - 150% of the "B" and the "E." Or you might try scaling them, but using them as a dropcap.
2. There's no design in your logo that can lend itself well to extension such as pens, shirts, caps, camera straps, lens caps or any other doo-dads that we call "premiums."
A strong, successful logo will have a lot of legs and can be used in a lot of applications. You might find yourself in a "trade" with a client who actually produces neat/unique premiums that you could hand out to clients and potential clients. Always best to have a design element within the logo (think of the Nike swoosh or the "apple" in Apple Macintosh) that can easily be incorporated into other applications--and in color or B&W.
Here's just a basic example that I threw together on Illustrator to show how variances in typefaces combined with a "design" that can be the "logo" can help in giving your brand/service a personality and a uniqueness.
The "B" is just a simple paintbrush stroke, the sans-serif typeface used for "Brittany Esther" steps just far enough out of the expected to suggest creativity, while the widely tracked "photography" suggests "clean, precise, neat."
Not trying to do this for you or say "my idea is better," but instead just wanting to try and show how the elements can and should all work togther to build and commmunicate a personality that is reflective of your creative side, while not disparaging your business side.
I'm going to be in and out the next few weeks, but if you want help or feedback, I'll be happy to try and help you out best I can.
Regards,
Jeff