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September 3, 2011 by Kat

Out of the Zone

Every once in a while, you get to try something completely, totally new. While in Colorado, I had the opportunity to take photos of a band my brother is in, Cedar Avenue Blues Band or CABB for short. (My brother is the drummer, the tall one on the left, in the blue shirt.)

We didn’t have much time together, and I didn’t have time to scout a location, so I asked them to pick one. They worked it out with the Yellow Cab company to use their lot. We could wander around and take photos anywhere, but nothing would be moved for us. We met in the early evening, as the sun was lowering in the sky. It was hotter than heck and they were wearing these nice clothes.

Can we talk about uncomfortable? I’m usually not a people photographer. Now I had four adults I had to make simultaneously look good. I had a location with lots of distracting background, and light that was changing rapidly. Thank goodness, they were a great group to work with. As we moved around the lot, everyone made suggestions and worked together on ideas. The best idea of all was to have them pull out their instruments and play. Everyone relaxed and started having fun. You can see they are a band, and you can tell they have fun together. Don’t you want to hear them play now, after seeing this image?

What started out as really uncomfortable and nerve-wracking yielded something great. My skills with street scenes and varying light situations worked here as well, but I needed to use them quickly. It was worthwhile to get out of my comfort zone and experiment with a new situation and new subject. As I tell the participants of my Find Your Eye classes, each time you step outside of your comfort zone you expand it a little further. I doubt I’ll head in the direction of taking band promo shots on a regular basis, but at least I know I can get something useful. I’ve learned a little bit more, and my confidence has grown because of it.

In honor of our Process of Elimination exploration going on now, I’m going to share the straight out of camera shot too. When comparing with the image above you’ll note that I did some cropping and exposure adjustments in post processing. In this case, I was trying to get everything in the shot with a “clean” background, with room to adjust and crop later. I was taking a lot of shots as they sang, several frames per second, to get different expressions. It’s amazing how hard it is to get four people looking natural all at the same time!

I also played around with some post-processing, to see what they might like. Their favorite is the color boost. Mine’s the black and white. What’s yours?

Color boost
Black and White

You can hear the Cedar Avenue Blues Band here, or look for them playing around the Denver area. You’ll have a fun time!
_________________________

What’s happening around The Kat Eye View of the World…

  • The current Exploring with a Camera theme is Process of Elimination. Check out the post here and explore with me.
  • Do you want to deepen the connection between your heart and soul and your photography? Registration for the fall series of the Find Your Eye e-course is open! Visit here for more info.
  • The Kat Eye Newsletter comes out tomorrow. New subscribers this week will receive a catch up mailing with the Night Photography Camera Companion. You are not too late if you sign up before Sunday.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: band, car, Colorado, people, process of elimination

August 16, 2011 by Kat

Planting Flowers of Generosity

These lovely flowers grace the doorstep of a store in Carbondale, Colorado. They put here for all to enjoy, freely shared with the passersby. They are meant for everyone, not just one, hence the sign in them, “Thank you for not picking me.” I found this sign cute and amusing, but it’s a polite little reminder that by a simple inaction – not picking the flowers – you can give the beauty to others as well.

Today I am thinking of generosity and service and how this fits with creating our best work and our best lives. I started thinking on this from an idea in Twyla Tharp’s book The Creative Habit: Learn It and Use It for Life, which I am still reading and loving. She writes:

How to be Lucky: Be generous. I don’t use that word lightly. Generosity is luck going in the opposite direction, away from you. If you’re generous to someone, if you do something to help him out, you are in effect making him lucky. This is important. It’s like inviting yourself into a community of good fortune.

Doesn’t that quote just feel right? Generosity is luck flowing out. We get as much, or more, from that outflow than when things are coming to us. And I think the kind of generosity she is talking is not about money, it is about spirit and heart. What do we have to offer others? Is it a smile, a phone call? We can be generous with our time and our attention. Our knowledge. Our encouragement, support and enthusiasm. There are a million ways we can be generous every day, and the first step may be leaving the flowers alone so that others can enjoy them too.

Building on this, another idea came my way this morning, via the Brave Girls Club “Daily Truths”emails (you too can sign up for these, go here). The email says:

Dear Influential Girl,

There is a beautiful and little known secret to happiness that it sometimes takes us way too long to finally learn….and it is one that we can start practicing today, fabulous friend.

When life feels overwhelming, upsetting or grim…we can instantly change our outlook on things by getting out and serving someone else. Somehow, when we turn our focus to someone else, and especially to making their load lighter, or their day brighter…it comes back to us ten times stronger even than what we put out. That is some sweet math, isn’t it?

If things are tough right now, even if you feel like you don’t have time……just try it out. Make a phone call, write a kind note…..bake some cookies or make a piece of art for someone. Take time to really visit….help someone do something that is hard for them and easy for you. Something so beautiful will happen that you will forget about your own sadness for a while…and when things start feeling tough again, you have the power to get out and serve mankind in little ways all over again.

Just try, my friend. It will be worth the effort.

This is one of the most magical facts of life….and it works every time.

I like what they wrote, “…do something that is hard for them and easy for you.” That feels right to me too. Generosity and service don’t have to be hard. They don’t have to be a huge sacrifice in order to “count.” Maybe it’s as simple as sharing something we are good at with others. Maybe it’s just sharing a piece of our art in the form of a postcard in the mail, or a technique on a blog post. I think of these things, because they are how I share. They are what I enjoy doing. I hadn’t quite thought of them quite in the light of generosity and service before.

At the moment we give of ourselves, we are outside of ourselves. We become part of the larger world and are contributing to a greater good. We make the world a more beautiful place. And, while it’s not often our intent with generosity and service, we gain too. We forget our sadness, our own personal issues, and make room for that good fortune Twyla talks about to come our way.

If the first step toward generosity is not picking the flowers, the second step is surely planting and tending a few of our own. I’m pondering what flowers I’m planting today, through simple acts of generosity and service. How about you?

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: Carbondale, Colorado, flowers, inspiration, personal growth, pot

August 15, 2011 by Kat

When a Plan Comes Together

Cheerful flowers and colorful paint make me smile!
Carbondale, Colorado

Guess what today is? Monday, yes. The middle of August, that too. It’s also the day I link in to Creative Every Day and the Creative Exchange. But it’s even bigger than that: Today is the first day of my part time work schedule. Woohoo!!

Last week everything was finalized and agreed, and as of today I will be working at my “day job” Monday through Friday ~11am to 5pm-ish. I am so excited. I have been working toward this change for a very long time.

For those of you who may be new around here, I fell in love with having my mornings as my personal time while in Italy. My work schedule was afternoons and evenings, due to the need to work with both the Italian and US folks on a daily basis, which left my personal time as the mornings. Some time ago, as part of a series called Lessons from Abroad, I wrote about how changing my schedule this way led to some great realizations for my creativity. Mornings are my creative time.

When I finalized my schedule and transition date with my new manager last week, I realized how long in coming this transition really was. It was almost a year ago, last October, when I first started talking to my former manager about going part time on my return to the US. It was before that, while writing the Lessons from Abroad series for Jenny Shih‘s newsletter and blog, that I identified the schedule change and aligning to my creative energy cycle as a key factor in my personal transformation. And it was part of writing the specific article, Change up Your Schedule, that I really started to think about how I could maintain my “mornings free” schedule upon my return.

So, over the last year I’ve been having periodic conversations with my husband, my management at work, and myself about how this could work. I’ve played with different schedule ideas, “trying them on” in my imagination to see what would fit for me personally and at work. The Monday-Friday/11-5 schedule is the one I settled on recently, and when I proposed it last week it was a win-win for everyone. My new manager likes that I will be there every day instead of taking a day off; I like that I have 5 more mornings a week for myself. Can’t beat that.

This is a great example of how long it can sometimes take an idea to come to fruition. The idea of part time/ mornings free was a seed planted a year ago. Nurtured, the seed grew into a plan that I took small steps on over time. It is a good reminder that if you stick with an idea, turn it into a plan and take baby steps toward it along the way, you can make it work. Things may not happen immediately, but with action, things do happen. Without action, it’s just daydreaming. Yes, I was nervous when I first started talking about part time at work. Yes, I was nervous to have the conversation on my schedule last week. But all of my groundwork and planning and patience paid off, and here I am this Monday morning, free.

What will I create today?

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: blue, Carbondale, color, Colorado, creative, flowers, Lessons from Abroad, repatriation, schedule

August 12, 2011 by Kat

The Reality of the Situation

A group of colorful bike racks in a Carbondale, Colorado city parking lot.

I’m back in Oregon this week. I don’t just mean back from vacation, I mean as of this week, I’m really here, back from Italy too. This is the first week where the reality of our situation – living here permanently again – has really sunk in. A few people have mentioned to me that things seem to be going pretty well with our return. It’s true, they have been going surprisingly well. The adjustment has been much easier than anticipated in many ways. But I don’t think it was until this week that “reality” hit.

Here are a few things I’ve noticed this week:

Travel. For the first time in two and a half years, I don’t have a vacation coming up in the next couple of months.  No visits to new countries on the horizon, no next trip in the works. Just a stretch of several months with no vacation time left at work and no firm plans yet for future travel. It is odd. I found myself hurrying at work to get something done before I left for… nowhere. I’m not sure what I was thinking. I’ve gotten used to working to that next deadline of time off. Even moving back, I had three weeks here and then we left again to visit Colorado.  It’s not bad, it’s just different and something I need to get used to. This reminds me I need to get some plans on the calendar, if only for some weekend excursions. I love to travel too much!

Transport. We are down to one vehicle, living in a place where we’ve always had two. When we moved to Italy, we sold our car and had a friend keep our truck. We had always planned on buying another car when we returned, but several months ago I started wondering if we needed to. We had been living in Italy with one car, I could ride my bike to work (I used to commute by bike all the time), and our town is small enough to easily get around. Between bike, bus and scooter I figured we could get by. After returning home from Italy, we had a rental car for several weeks, which was returned the day before we left for Colorado. This week is the first week we are truly living with one vehicle. It’s a different feeling to bike to work because I have to rather than because I want to. It’s different to ask if a friend can drive because I don’t have a car. Not bad, just a little uncomfortable at the moment. Not to mention that I have discovered that my body is not in the best shape to go from riding zero miles to 60 miles (6 mile commute each way) in a week. I couldn’t quite make it through the week, I caught a ride on Wednesday to give my legs a break.

Finances. We’ve gone from a completely unique financial mindset in Italy (two years = no regrets), to a temporary mindset moving home (get our lives set up ASAP), to me starting a part time schedule next week. Back to reality, and getting ourselves on a long-term budget once again. We didn’t go hog-wild while on our assignment, but the “no regrets” mentality did change our handling of money. That can’t stay in place forever without serious consequences. I tend toward being financially conservative so my budget-minded, practical side keeps me in line, but my impulsive, emotional side is feeling the tension of restraint. Working part time is nothing new and living on a budget is nothing new… It’s just like the bike though, we’re out of shape and it’s a little uncomfortable at the moment.

So there you have it in a nutsell: Reality has set in. When first moving back, it was all about the physical changes that come with location. Now I’m feeling real changes that make me internally uncomfortable. I know I’ll get used to this new reality, but that doesn’t eliminate the discomfort of changing habits. It only makes it manageable.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: Carbondale, color, Colorado, repatriation

August 10, 2011 by Kat

The Answer

So, what’s your guess for today? USA or Europe? Just kidding, I won’t drag you through another day of suspense!

Today’s image is from Carbondale, Colorado.

Yesterday’s image was from Old Colorado City, Colorado. Old Colorado City is the historic part of Colorado Springs.

Monday’s image was from Burano, Italy.

What do you take away from this little exercise?

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: Burano, Carbondale, Colorado, colorado springs, door, flowers, Italy, pot, red

August 1, 2011 by Kat

Step it Up

Stairways are such a great subject, and a perfect repeating pattern, especially with the light and shadow of the railings repeating on the steps. A few weeds for some natural contrast never hurts the image, either. Thank goodness not everyone gets around to pulling the weeds or painting their houses, or the world would be a boring place for photographers like me.

Have you been seeing repeating patterns? You have one more day to link in with Exploring with a Camera! I hope you’ll share the patterns you’ve seen in the world around you.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: Carbondale, Colorado, repeating patterns, stairs

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