Meet your photographer, Jeff Mosier
Jeff, who finds it odd to write about himself in the third person, has been interested in photography since he was a boy. While studying journalism at the University of Nevada, Reno, he took a photojournalism course that inspired him to treat it as more than a hobby. This is when he bought his first camera, a Nikon D300.
After graduating, he got a job as a reporter and photographer at the Las Vegas Review-Journal in 2010. Along with reporting and writing stories for the newspaper, Jeff took his own photos for hundreds of assignments each year. He even had a couple of second- and third-place finishes in the photo category of the Nevada Press Association’s “Better Newspaper Contest Awards” in 2012 and 2013. He later became an editor and mentored young reporters until he decided it was time to leave Las Vegas, in 2022, for cooler climes.
Jeff moved to Colorado for a job in the Marketing and Communications Department at Denver Health, where he works today. As a communications specialist — his official job title — Jeff helps tell the story of the city’s safety-net hospital through words, photos and videos. He writes for the patient and community newsletter and the hospital website, shoots and edits videos, writes and edits employee communications and, yes, even takes photos. He captures images of patients, doctors, nurses and thousands of other staff members during hospital and community events, in the operating room, on the helipad or even group and individual headshots for teams across Denver Health.
The Denver Post has published Jeff’s photos as part of a series on adolescent substance use treatment.
In 2025, it was finally time for Jeff to start his own business, Mosier Photography Company, which he hoped would help him grow his skills and make extra money to support his not-exactly-cheap snowboarding habit.
When he’s not working, Jeff can be found snowboarding with his Epic and Ikon passes in the winter.
Jeff mostly shoots with Sony cameras these days, including the A7RV and A7IV.