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Archives for March 2012

March 13, 2012 by Kat

Beauty and Grace

Beauty and grace are performed whether or not we will or sense them. The least we can try to do is be there.
— Annie Dillard

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: Corvallis, landscape, Oregon, quote, snow, winter

March 12, 2012 by Kat

Subtle Reminders

The sun and moon come together in this tiny little bit of graffiti. The curve subtly breaks up the the lines of the bricks, the door, the strong shadow. If you aren’t looking closely, you will miss it.

I’m not sure why I like this simple image so much. It is an image that calls for the balance of shapes, as we’re studying now for Exploring with a Camera, so that is one element. But it’s more than that… There is something in the quiet whisper of the graffiti, something usually meant to be loud and bold. It’s as if it was put there especially for the observant. A test of sorts. And if you notice, if you pass the test, you are rewarded with thoughts of the cycle of the sun and moon. The never-ending nature of time.

All from a tiny bit of graffiti on a brick wall. Perhaps I’m reading into things this morning… it is an hour earlier than usual, after all. Here we are, we humans, trying to shift the cycle of the sun and the moon by changing our clocks. It must seem laughable to the universe.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: brick, Corvallis, graffiti, Oregon, shapes

March 11, 2012 by Kat

Making a Mark

What am I trying to say as an artist? Where is it that I want to go? Those questions are swirling around in my head after taking a one-day class called Preparing and Presenting your Photographic Portfolio from a wonderful instructor, Chris Eagon, at the Oregon College of Art and Craft yesterday.

The question “where do I want to go” is an important one for us as artists. Having goals and direction are what keep us moving forward, learning and growing. It’s through the continued journey that we figure out how to make our unique mark in the world.

I’ve known since living in Italy that the next step for me, upon moving back to the US, would be to bring my photographs into the real world. I needed the foundation I gained while in Italy: Confidence in the creation of my images, sharing them with others online, and identification of my unique vision. I’m building from there now, learning how to print and exhibit my work. Even harder, learning how to talk about my work and myself as an artist, with people face-to-face. I did not expect it to be such a challenge, with all of that confidence and knowledge I had gained. But it’s a new realm, and the challenges are different. The fears are different. It’s the next step I need to take in my creative journey, regardless of the resistance that comes along.

I am starting to understand that there is the journey that is “Kat the blogger and teacher” and the journey that is “Kat the artist.” The are separate yet inextricable. If I did not continue on my own artistic journey, separate from blogging and teaching, I would have nothing to share here. I have to admit, the journey of the artist feels a bit more scary and lonely. It’s the one I have to do on my own, in order to be true to myself.

So I’m letting my thoughts swirl around the questions: What am I trying to say as an artist? Where is it that I want to go? Only by answering these for myself will I figure out how to make my mark as an artist. I thought I knew the answers, but they have changed. It’s time to answer them again.

How about you, do you know the answers to these questions for yourself? Do you know where you are headed next?

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: alley, black and white, brick, Corvallis, graffiti, hand, Oregon

March 9, 2012 by Kat

Exploring with a Camera: Balancing Shapes

Welcome to the March installment of Exploring with a Camera! This month I am going to talk about balance in photographs, specifically balancing shapes.

Not too long ago I posted this image of a green door, which I love. After posting it I got to thinking… Why do I love this simple image? What attracts me to photographing scenes like this? Why do I distill the world down into bits and pieces like this? After some thought, I realized that capturing images like this is just plain fun for me, because the compositions are all about playing with balance. I see a scene like this and I get to experiment, balancing the shapes in different ways, seeing what works best to create an interesting image. When I do this kind of play, I’m not only learning how to balance simple 2D shapes within the frame, I’m establishing a foundation that helps me to balance more complex compositions.

So let’s start with this image, breaking it down into the basic shapes and looking at how they balance.

The shapes in this image are the square window, the circular doorknob, and the line of the door jam. (For the purpose of this discussion of balance let’s define a line as a shape.) The square window is my focal point – it is the largest element, has the highest contrast and the most interest with the bit of paint in the window, giving it the greatest visual weight. The door knob and door jam are lower contrast, they are supporting elements in this composition. The empty space is also a supporting element in the composition, providing room for the different shapes to interact. The square of the window is balanced both diagonally in the frame by the grouping of the door knob and door jam in the lower right, and horizontally by the line of the door jam on the right.

This simple example introduces a few important concepts in balance: Visual weight, symmetry and direction of balance.


Visual Weight

Visual weight goes beyond the relative size of an element, encompassing all the factors that affect where our eye is attracted first in the photographic frame. The element with the greatest visual weight will attract your eye first, regardless of physical size. Visual weight could be an Exploring with a Camera topic of its own, so I’ll distill it down to the relevant points for this discussion of balancing shapes. Generally, an element will have a greater weight if it has:

  • Higher contrast with its surroundings. This is not just light/dark contrast, although that is the simplest for our discussion here.
  • Brighter color than its surroundings.
  • Higher complexity than surrounding objects.
  • Unique or Distinct attributes as compared to the surrounding objects.

Typically, you can balance visual weight with an opposite:

  • High contrast can be balanced with low contrast.
  • Bright color can be balanced with neutral or more subtle color.
  • Complexity is balanced by simplicity and space.
  • Unique or Distinct attributes can be balanced by sameness – such as a repeating pattern or open space.

Look at this example of the door above. The bright color and complexity of the door, along with size, give it the greatest visual weight. The door is balanced by the neutral-colored space around it, and the simple line of the black pipe on the left.


Symmetry and Direction of Balance

Symmetry describes how the shapes reflect each other within the frame, while Direction of Balance describes how the shapes interact in terms of balance. A perfectly symmetric composition will have elements that mirror each other, both horizontally and vertically. The direction of balance does not always match the symmetry of the shapes, as the examples below will show.

This image is an example of a completely symmetric composition. The shapes are symmetric in both directions, a mirror image of each other whether you look horizontally (left-right) or vertically (up-down). The focal point shape, the letter slot, is also balanced evenly by the shapes of the door detail in each corner. This type of composition is pleasing and peaceful, but it doesn’t happen often in the real world and would get boring pretty quickly.

A partially symmetric composition will have elements that are either horizontally, vertically or diagonally symmetric. The direction of the symmetry, however, does not necessarily provide the direction of the balance. In this example, there is horizontal symmetry in the shape of the elements in the hull of this boat, but the texture created by the seawater in the paint at the bottom of the frame, the real subject, is balanced vertically by the stripe of dark blue paint at the top of the frame.

In an asymmetric composition you won’t have any obvious horizontal, vertical or diagonal symmetry. You balance between each individual element and their relative visual weights to create a composition. These types of compositions are the most dynamic and interesting. They are also the most challenging, and the ones you are going to encounter the most in the real world. Consider this example. The mail box, my intended subject, is the focal point because of its high contrast with the dark space around it. It is balanced to the right by the window and box of flowers, and below by the siding. The amount of window/box that was included in the frame was chosen intentionally to balance the element of the mail box, the red flower repeating and balancing the red letters and flag on the mailbox.


A Framework for Building Balance of Shapes

While I am out shooting, I don’t necessarily have all of these concepts at the forefront of my mind. I play around with different compositions finding the one I like best, which always seems to be the one with the best balance, even if I wasn’t thinking of balance at the time. To develop a feel for balancing shapes, as you shoot consider these three questions:

  • What am I balancing? This will be your main element or subject.
  • What do I have available to balance? This could be space, or other elements. Distill the elements down to shapes and lines to look for opportunities to balance.
  • How can I balance these elements? Look at visual weight, symmetry and direction of balance. You can balance horizontally, vertically or diagonally. Explore orientation of the frame, either landscape or portrait. Allow some of the elements to be cut off, creating a line or a shape defined by the edge of the frame.

Let’s look at a few more examples of balancing shapes using these questions as a framework. We’ll also keep the ideas of visual weight, symmetry and direction of balance in mind.


What am I balancing? The red mailbox.
What do I have available to balance? The white wall, the blue door, and the numbers on the door.
How can I balance these elements? The red mail box wins for visual weight, because of the bright color and the contrast of the surrounding white wall. It is balanced by the white space around it as well as diagonally by the contrasting numbers in the blue door, and horizontally by the large shape of the blue door itself.

What am I balancing? The colors painted on the wall.
What do I have available to balance? The pipe and attachment, the neutrally painted wall, and the texture of the wall.
How can I balance these elements? The greatest visual weight is the with the painted colors, both for their brightness and the contrast of complementary colors yellow and purple. The contrast of yellow and purple is first balanced by the space of the light purple around the yellow. The bright color on the top of the frame is balanced vertically with the neutral color on the bottom, while the weight of the color contrast is also balanced vertically by the pipe attachment on the wall. The line of the pipe and the texture of the wall provide a continuity throughout the frame that ties the whole scene together. You’ll notice that the photograph has more going on in the right side, both top and bottom. This is balanced by the open space to the left.

What am I balancing? The ladders.
What do I have available to balance? The bright wall, the ground, the sign.
How can I balance these elements? The ladders have the visual weight because of their contrast with the bright wall, the complex shape, and the space around them. The contrast of the ground and the wall is minimized by including very little ground, only enough to place the ladders on to ground them. The ladders are placed to the lower right of the frame, balanced by the sign in the upper left corner. The rectangle of the sign is cropped so that the shape provides the appropriate balance, and only as much text to be relevant and non-distracting is revealed.

It is important to note in all of these examples that a balance is achieved both by how these elements are included in the frame as well as what is excluded. All of these images are a subset of a larger scene. Exploring balance requires a give and take of including and excluding the available elements. (See more on the idea of exclusion in Exploring with a Camera: Process of Elimination.)


Time to Explore

Even when looking at basic shapes in the 2D plane, the topic of balance can be complex. You are balancing shapes, color, contrast and complexity with multiple elements within the frame. If you’re like me, you probably do this naturally and intuitively, but it’s a good exercise to look a closer like this to understand the underlying principles. As you use this framework to play with the simple balance of shapes in your compositions, you can begin to develop a deeper understanding of balance in general. This knowledge will extend beyond simple shapes in the 2D plane to more complex situations and compositions, which are what we usually encounter and photograph.

I look forward to seeing the results of your experimentation with the balance of shapes. Go through your archive or go out shooting over the next couple of weeks looking for this type of balance. Use the questions I’ve provided and the ideas of visual weight, symmetry and direction to help you evaluate the balance of shapes you can achieve. You can link your explorations below. I can’t wait to see and learn more from you!


Filed Under: Exploring with a Camera, The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: balance, line, shape, symmetry, visual weight

March 8, 2012 by Kat

Happy Women’s Day

In Italy, the tradition on Women’s Day is to give the yellow Mimosa flower to women in your life. So today I have some Mimosa for you!

I had never heard of International Women’s Day before moving to Italy. Now, I see references to it quite a few places here in the US too. Maybe I was never aware of it before, maybe it’s come into greater prominence in the last few years. I’m not sure.

It’s an important day in a lot of ways, requiring a moment of pause. An opportunity to take a moment and reflect on the lives that we are able to lead as women in the developed world. For all of the challenges we may face, they pale in comparison to our counterparts in other places around the world. I have had so many opportunities – for education, for employment, for freedom in my relationships and life. I have practiced engineering for 20 years, a non-traditional women’s career, without serious issue with my gender. I have a voice here online, without fear of reprisal. We are lucky for the freedoms women have in our culture.

I think that’s why I resonate with the idea of what Nest does so much, helping women build a sustainable career and life for themselves and their families. Today I learned of Kiva, another microfinance organization. Through Marie Forleo, I heard about this special opportunity to give a loan to women in other countries without it costing you anything. Visit this link to see how Kiva and Dermalogica are making this possible, and you can take advantage of the opportunity to give a loan too.

If nothing else today, take a moment to reflect on the opportunities that you have had as a woman, and how lucky you are when put into perspective by other places in the world.

In the tradition of Italy, give a yellow flower to a woman who matters to you. You all matter, thank you for being here. Happy Women’s Day.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: flower, France, international women's day, Italy, mimosa, Nice, yellow

March 7, 2012 by Kat

A Deep Breath

It’s funny, I feel as if I am surfacing for air today. After being pulled down into the Spiral of Creativity with A Sense of Place I am able to take a breath after the launch of registration. I’m always amazed at how this spiral works. How it catches me up sometimes in the currents of creativity, and how much effort and focus it takes to complete something. I’m not done, but I’m in a calm pool for the moment, floating along and catching my breath.

Today’s photo is what I needed to pause for calm, to catch my breath. The color, the simplicity, a frame of beauty found in an alleyway. A respite in the spiral, before I dive back in. Do you ever get pulled into the Spiral of Creativity? How do you catch your breath when that happens?


Today is the last day for linking in to February’s Photo-Heart Connection. I can’t believe it’s been 7 days already! There are such beautiful connections this month. Thank you so much for sharing them, and for visiting each other and connecting at a heart level. I love seeing these heart connections form. There is still room for you to join in today.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: abstract, alley, blue, color, Corvallis, Oregon, pipes

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