Perfectly Imperfect Photography

Perfectly Imperfect Photography Cedar Park TX, Family Photography, Maternity Photos + Newborn Photographer - Pamela Clark I am a mother of 5. Step mom to 2. Grandmother of 2.

I am a wife, a friend, a former software developer and a photographer. I spent years documenting my family through photographs. At first it was a simple point and shoot 35mm camera. I had no idea what I was doing or how the photos would turn out. Then came the digital era, and having the ability to see the images and delete the bad ones really made me focus more on composition. I found that I love

d capturing my children during activity. Not so much while posing. The best photos are capturing those expressions they made while telling a story, or laughing, or while determined to achieve a goal. Sometimes, even that pout or cry was the perfect photograph. Over the years, I have fallen in love with taking photographs of families, babies, children, pets, graduates, engagements, weddings, maternity and newborns. I strive to capture the moment as it unfolds rather than capture a posed idea of what the moment should be. I want my clients to remember the day, the way it occurred, in all its perfectly imperfect beauty.

03/10/2026

One piece of satin.
Five completely different looks.

This is why styling matters.
Fabric, light, and movement can change everything—and it means you don’t need a closet full of dresses to feel incredible in your maternity photos.

Trust the process. Trust the eye.
We make magic happen in our cedar park maternity photography studio.

Yesterday, in a beautiful ceremony that my Mother planned years before her death, we honored her life and said our goodb...
02/27/2026

Yesterday, in a beautiful ceremony that my Mother planned years before her death, we honored her life and said our goodbyes.

If you knew my mom, you knew strength.

Not loud strength. Not flashy strength. But the kind you build quietly over a lifetime of doing hard things because you have no other choice.

She was born on May 11, 1944, in Pittston, Pennsylvania, the 2nd of 11 children. She never met her father. He was killed in Normandy during World War II just one month after she was born. She was raised by her grandmother, and from the very beginning, life required resilience of her.

She was born deaf. She also had deformities in both thumbs, which meant she lived her entire life without the full use of her hands - relying only on her fingers to do what most of us take for granted. And later in life, she lost vision in one eye.

Layer upon layer of challenge.

And yet - she worked. She sewed. She raised two daughters as a single mother. She built a life.

Our world is not built for the deaf.

And when the deaf grow elderly, it becomes even harder. Being admitted to a hospital or nursing home is not the same experience for them. Not even close. Deafness is often mistaken for “just old age hearing loss.” People assume if they speak louder, it will solve the problem.

It doesn’t.

Deafness is not about volume. It is about language.

It is hard being deaf and aging.

But she never stopped being strong. She never stopped being independent. She never stopped fighting in her own quiet way.

She taught me determination. She taught me compassion. She taught me how to stand up for someone whose voice isn’t easily heard.

Her greatest accomplishment was not surviving hardship - it was her family. Her daughters. Her grandchildren. Her great-grandchildren. They are the proof that her life mattered.

Mom, you were strong in ways many will never fully understand.

Your voice was powerful - even in silence.

We will carry your strength forward.

And we will miss you more than words can say.

It is with a heavy but grateful heart that I share that my mother has passed away.My mom was deaf and lived with disabil...
02/17/2026

It is with a heavy but grateful heart that I share that my mother has passed away.

My mom was deaf and lived with disabilities that made life harder than it ever should have been. And yet—she was one of the strongest, most independent people I have ever known.

She raised my sister and me as a single mother from the time I was nine years old. We were proud to be CODA—Children of Deaf Adults. From a young age we learned to interpret, to advocate, to navigate a world that was not built with her in mind. What I didn’t fully understand then, but do now, is how much courage it took for her to move through that world every single day.

During COVID, I brought her from Canada to Texas because I couldn’t bear the thought of her being alone if she became ill. In 2022, we discovered just how many health challenges she had been carrying quietly. The last four years were filled with hospital stays, hard conversations, constant advocacy, and making sure interpretation was provided so her voice—her fears, her wishes—were truly heard.

It was exhausting at times. It was overwhelming. And it was an honor.

She taught me strength not as a slogan, but as a daily choice. She taught me determination when systems failed her. She taught me compassion by living in a world that often overlooked disability. She taught me what it means to stand up for someone’s dignity when they cannot do it alone.

I am heartbroken that she is gone.

But I am relieved that she went peacefully, with her daughters by her side.

I am deeply thankful that I was able to bring her close, to care for her, to advocate for her, and to give back even a fraction of what she gave us.

Her life was not easy. But it was powerful.

And her strength lives on in us.

❤️

02/08/2026

If your photo feels outdated, stiff, or doesn’t actually look like you — it’s probably costing you opportunities.

A modern headshot should feel confident, current, and human — not like something you dread posting on LinkedIn.

This is for professionals who want to look polished without looking posed.

📍 Austin / Cedar Park✨ Modern headshots designed to actually represent you
👉 Save this if a headshot refresh is on your to-do list
👉 Follow for more behind-the-scenes + transformations





02/06/2026

This morning tested my patience.

I pulled into the Summermoon Coffee drive-thru and a car cut me off—wrong direction. Then two more followed. I was annoyed-annoyed. Fully prepared to say something at the window because rules exist for a reason, right?

Then I got to the window.
“Your drinks were paid for by the guy in front of you.”

Cue the emotional whiplash.

All those irritated thoughts I was rehearsing suddenly felt… small. So instead of complaining, I paid for the car behind me. Not because I’m a saint—but because I didn’t want my mood to win the morning.

Here’s the truth:
Bad thoughts show up fast. They’re loud. They feel justified.
But we still get to decide what we do next.

Today, a small act of kindness rerouted my whole mindset.
And choosing to pass it on reminded me that we’re always one decision away from turning irritation into grace.

Maybe the lesson isn’t “be positive all the time.”
Maybe it’s this:
✨ Pause long enough for good to interrupt you. ✨

Sometimes the universe pays for your coffee.
Sometimes you pay it forward.
Either way—let the moment change you for the better. ☕️💛

Three years of watching this sweet boy grow.  ❤️From tiny newborn stretches to wide-eyed wonder… Alister has been magic ...
01/31/2026

Three years of watching this sweet boy grow. ❤️
From tiny newborn stretches to wide-eyed wonder… Alister has been magic to photograph at every stage.

That look of awe?
That’s exactly why I do this.

Happy 3rd birthday Alister🎈
Your story has been such an honor to document.

01/21/2026

Tell me why my 19-month-old granddaughter can say EVERYONE’S name…
except mine.

Me: “Say Mimi 🥰”
Her: “I want Papa.”
Me: “Miii-mi?”
Her: “Mama.”
Me: “MIMI.”
Her: locks eyes “…Dada.”

This is not a speech delay.
This is psychological warfare.
And honestly? I respect the commitment. 😂

Anyone else being bullied by a cute toddler who knows exactly how to push buttons?



01/20/2026

Photoshoot style alert!

What should kiddos wear? Head to for outfit inspiration!

We had a blast photographing outfits for the Mondays By Mimi website! Can you tell??? 🤣

01/12/2026

Cayden is in preschool now, so Mondays look different.

Koda only says one word at a time, but she’s mastered the art of communication.
I say “don’t drop it,” she laughs, puts the toy back in… then immediately pretends she might do it again.

16 months is part comedy, part psychological warfare.
What age made you laugh and question yourself at the same time?

Address

Philadelphia, PA

Telephone

+15127398421

Website

https://perfectlyimperfectphotography.com/links

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