Dec 13, 2023 Beatrice Clogston
Beth Kirby, known as Local Milk,” died suddenly at the age of 48 from Cancer. The world of food photography lost an incredible talent.
Local milk is a blog about home cooking, travel, family, and slow living about being present and finding nourishment in many forms.
It’s all about establishing a base in another country and discovering the extraordinary in the mundane. It’s primarily about appreciating the beauty of ordinary life and recognizing the perfection in flaws.
Inquiries for guest contributors can be sent to the Local Milk Blog through email. They will get in touch if people’s writing and pictures seem suitable for the site and its viewers. People may go to Local Milk Retreats to learn more about their previous retreats, upcoming retreats, and what’s happening.
Beth Kirby’s cause of death was Cancer. She was 48 years of age and a native of Tennessee, United States of America.
The road to rehabilitation is long, but Kirby has been on it for more than 25 years. She fought her problems, addiction, and insanity before discovering that you can transform what might otherwise be negative energy into constructive creation by being present in life.
Being a Southerner means embracing both its beauty and its flaws. She added that this tradition exemplifies the complexity that occurs in all people. Beth believes that living this way of life can assist you in discovering your path through life by embracing its ups and downs.
“Similar to what we experience on our journey north or south when it comes down Southron pleasure–a sense of belonging while also understanding how fortunate you’ve been thus far because nothing lasts indefinitely, “she added.
Beth Kirby is a well-known businesswoman and the originator of Local Milk. The news of Beth Kirby’s death has gone viral on social media as her fans and followers couldn’t believe this news.
Kirby went to Loyola University New Orleans to study philosophy and write in the low country. She had religious encounters with oysters on the half-shell swimming in Tabasco, crawfish in brown paper sacks, muffulettas from Central Grocery, and Café du Monde’s midnight beignets.
In the summers, she backpacked across Europe on a shoestring budget, while she spent most of her time in a little Dutch town eating handmade bread and Stroop waffles at a cafe called L’abri, which means “shelter” in French.
Beth Kirby was married to Matthew Ludwikowski, the founder of bold coffee, whose mission is to produce the most excellent coffee possible and share their inspiration and enthusiasm for coffee to build a community around it.
The couple has a daughter too. The pair managed to keep their lifestyle on a low profile as they kept their personal life away from the media and just gave all the limelight to their works.
Kirby didn’t share any family details. Her most crucial reason as a freelance stylist, photographer, and recipe creator strived to make ordinary life attractive and exciting. She wasn’t in it for the sake of being gorgeous. With the moon always in the corner of her eye, she defied herself as a mystic.
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