Thanks Jeff...
I'm not getting what you mean by 'my copy', care to expand on it? Thanks
"Copy" refers to the written words in a piece of advertising, pitch-writing, etc. "Copywriters" (my old profession) are the people who come up with the headlines and words for print ads, radio commercials, TV commercials, outdoor ads, etc.
For instance, if you're going to "specialize" in senior (high school) pictures, rather than the long, bland copy you have now, try a headline like "Change the way you look at yourself," or "I can change the way you see yourself" that engages the website visitor to think beyond just the "oh, another picture taker" mentality.
Additionally, what copy you DO use (and you will need some), make sure that it communicates benefits to the (potential) customer. Remember: pictures are little pieces of time captured on little chips or little pieces of film and preserved for all of Eternity.
I'm looking at your site right now. I really like the scrolling shots. What is needed is a payoff--something like "Capturing the moment for all of time."
Just some payoff headline thoughts that come to mind would be:
"You'll see what I see."
"Your moment through my eyes."
"Capturing the moment."
"When you only get one shot."
"When you only get one shot at a one-shot moment."
"There's more to life than meets the eye."
"Where lens and life come together."
And so on.
In your copy, avoid using ambiguous words like "several portrait options." How many is several--two, five, a dozen? In fact, instead of your intro paragraph (copy), I would simply bring your links up in a vertical bullet-point fashion and use a smaller version of the type face you have for your logo.
The danger is in over-explaining what you do not offer or are limited on rather than underexplaining what you DO offer. The idea of a website is to initiate communications. Write and design with that in mind and at the forefront.
Looking better, though. Keep at it.
Jeff