is the first to tell you that she doesn鈥檛 fit the climber stereotype. She wears technicolor clothing, dyes her hair bright red, and is frank about the fact that she doesn鈥檛 climb hard. Based in Las Vegas, outside the , she鈥檚 a self-professed with a day job as a carpenter with Cirque de Soleil. But over 33,000 followers聽know her as on Instagram, where she has gained recognition for her that mainly showcase amateur women climbers.
Yee鈥檚 shots portray what climbing looks like for average people, from prepping gear and starting a climb to finishing and celebrating back on the ground. She captures expressions of terror and frustration. Rather than pros, her subjects are other聽weekend warriors she鈥檚 out climbing with, representing a diversity of聽ages and skill levels. She calls her unique approach 鈥渃limbing for the rest of us,鈥 and she believes it鈥檚 key to increasing women鈥檚 participation in the sport.聽鈥淲e get these snapshots of climbers in media, and these glancing blows accumulate until you think: This is a climber. This is what women do. This is what an athlete does,鈥 Yee says. 鈥淎nd because that image doesn鈥檛 fit into your life, you think you can鈥檛 do it.鈥
鈥淚 realized that just because I didn鈥檛 fit into the mainstream perception of what climbing is, that didn鈥檛 mean I couldn鈥檛 be a climber.鈥
The mainstream images of 鈥渞eal climbers鈥 that Yee is聽talking about tend to fall into three categories. There鈥檚 the close-up action shot of the athlete on lead, taken from overhead to give a sense of dizzying height. There鈥檚 the wide shot with a vast sky, big wall, and tiny body to convey an epic feat. And, of course, there鈥檚 the nomadic-existence shot that makes you wonder how #vanlife climbers can be so photogenic聽without a working shower.
For Yee, the image that changed everything was a with painted nails. 鈥淚 thought: You can be girly and still rock climb?聽I realized that just because I didn鈥檛 fit into the mainstream perception of what climbing is, that didn鈥檛 mean I couldn鈥檛 be a climber.鈥
Yee wants her photos to help break down the walls that keep women from trying something because they worry that they won鈥檛 be good enough, won鈥檛 fit in, won鈥檛 [insert insecurity here]. 鈥淥ne image can change all that and make you think, Oh, maybe I can do that,鈥 Yee says. 鈥 for telling us that this thing we thought was true is not true at all鈥攊t鈥檚 that sense of possibility and empowerment I hope to inspire in women.鈥
Yee Breaks Down Her Approach in Five Shots

鈥淐limbing teaches you who you are, including acceptance of your situation. Sometimes we鈥檙e sitting on ropes thinking about the next move聽or just giving ourselves a break. It鈥檚 my job to show those things, because that鈥檚 what happens. We just don鈥檛 often see it in social media or magazines.鈥澛

Some of Yee鈥檚 favorite shots capture the strength of a climber聽the moment she overcomes her fears on the wall. 鈥淭here鈥檚 CrossFit muscle, yoga muscle, and then there鈥檚 rock-climbing muscle, the kind you don鈥檛 see until you see her struggle. Climbing is about pushing your limits, whether you鈥檙e on a 5.7 or a 5.13.鈥澛

Where most professional photographers might scout locations, wait for light, and set up a shot, Yee produces her images based on the circumstances. 鈥淚 just show up and think, OK, this is what I have today. If the butt shot is what I鈥檝e got, I鈥檓 going to work with it and figure out how to make it the coolest butt shot ever. Most climbers look at their feet while they鈥檙e climbing, so the butt shot is actually a great opportunity to get a photo of their face. That鈥檚 part of being creative: When you鈥檙e given something that鈥檚 less than ideal, what good can you make out of it?鈥

Yee views herself as an active participant in the climbing trip, which is a large part of what makes her photography special. 鈥淎 lot of photographers I鈥檝e met are people who document. I interfere, because I鈥檓 part of the group. I鈥檓 up on that line screaming, 鈥榊ou got this!鈥 I love seeing women try聽new things, and I love the psych level and determination that comes from being part of a group of women who are stoked to be out together.鈥

In Yee鈥檚 opinion, conventional climbing photography fails to capture joy. 鈥淢ost climbers aren鈥檛 pro climbers. They鈥檙e just taking the time to do what they love, and they鈥檙e making it work in their everyday lives鈥攍ike me. When you have a spark for something, and you do it because you love it, that excitement comes through so clearly, and people want to be part of it.鈥