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May 26, 2015 by Kat

Oregon Coast Travelogue

We spent the weekend unplugged from the Internet and plugged in to the family at our favorite spot on the coast, Washburne State Park. We hiked, we walked on the beach, we played, we made photographs. It was a wonderful break from our normal lives. We need to do this more often!

Enjoy a few pics from the area, all edited in Stackables with a formula I created called “Heceta.” It works great on landscapes!

UPDATE 3-June-15: If you would like the “Heceta” formula for your own use, do the following:
1. Make sure the Stackables app is installed on your iOS device.
2. On your iOS device, download the formula file from this link. (This is a Dropbox link, and you may be prompted to save the file to your Dropbox account, if you have one. Go ahead and save it to your Dropbox and then download from there.)
3. When you go to download or open the file, use “Open in…” and choose the “Open in Stackables” option.
4. Stackables will open and ask if you want to import the formula, click “Import.”
5. To use the formula, load a photo and then go to Favorite Formulas (the ones with a heart!). You will see the “Heceta” formula there. Have fun!!

Heceta Head Lighthouse

 Low tide at Heceta Head.

 The beach at Washburne.

 The bridge at Heceta Head beach. Oregon has the best bridges!

 Zoey loves fetching on the beach.


Hello from the Sloma family!

I forget we have this amazing place, the Oregon Coast, just an hour from our home in Corvallis. One more reason to love where I live!

Filed Under: Mobile Tutorial, The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: coast, Heceta Head, mobile tutorial, Oregon, Stackables app, stackables formula, Washburne

May 29, 2013 by Kat

Low Tide

I don’t get out to the coast nearly often enough. I tell myself this every time I visit. Having grown up landlocked in Colorado, there is always this amazement that I can go to the ocean, to the edge of the continent, in an hour’s drive.

Last weekend was a very low tide, and I went out with other members of the PhotoArts Guild for a Friday morning trip. Up well before dawn, we met at 5am to head out in the drizzle. We were back before I needed to be at work. You can’t beat that!

While I took my big camera, I left it in the car and carried only my iPhone. I could always go back if I decided I wanted my dSLR. (I didn’t.)

I found myself mostly interested in curves. The curve of rock carved by time…

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The pools of water…

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The sweep of sand and sea (my favorite of the day)…

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And the curve of the stranded, waiting for the tide to come back in…

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These aren’t my usual subjects, but it was a fun morning, nonetheless. It was great to get out to a new place, with people who know where to go. Great to talk on the drive and get to know the other members better. Great to share online and see the other points of view, after the excursion.

Have you joined a local art or photography group or club or guild yet? You should. Don’t be intimidated – there is always room for one more. You never know where you might end up going, once you join in.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: beach, coast, Oregon, rock, sand, sea

April 4, 2013 by Kat

The Elusive Landscapes

Landscapes have always eluded me. I could appreciate the awesome landscapes of other photographers but could never create them myself. So I focused in on the smaller scenes and details, and left the landscapes alone. Occasionally trying, and failing, to capture what I felt in the scene.

So it came as a surprise a few months ago when I found myself capturing more landscapes. What was going on?

With the “Blown Away” image I shared last week, I finally figured it out. The difference now is that I’m not trying to capture the “landscape.” There is no goal to fit in the entire scene or capture the grandeur.

IMG_4640

What I’m doing now is photographing trees, in context. I’m thinking: How do I best capture this tree and it’s surroundings? How do I best convey it’s loneliness or it’s beauty or it’s light? It all stems from that effort. That I end up with a photograph that can be categorized as a landscape is incidental.

Could it really be so simple? I think maybe it is. Landscapes may not be so elusive after all.

Thanks to Brenda’s Photo-Heart Connection post for reminding me of this “aha” moment. I love how the PHC community inspires and grows together! You can still join us this month, the Photo-Heart Connection link up is open until April 7th.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: California, coast, landscape, silhouette, sunset, tree

March 27, 2013 by Kat

Blown Away

I forgot to mention… I’m taking Spring Break away from the computer! I’ll be back here next week with new and interesting photographs. See you then!

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Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: coast, tree

January 1, 2013 by Kat

Celebrating One Year – Photo-Heart Connection: December

Simplicity. Peace. Beauty.

That’s what I see when I look at this image. A brief moment in time captured, expressing something wonderful.

IMG_1847

I also see a landscape. And I scratch my head quizzically, wondering, “When did I become a landscape photographer?”

The answer whispered to me: When you stopped telling yourself you weren’t one.

Oh, yeah.

When I threw out the rules for my photography and starting to follow what brought me joy. When I let myself have fun and play again. When I threw out the need for perfection and pixels and began to create with a terrible, low-resolution iPod Touch camera.

When I stopped defining myself.

That’s when I became a landscape photographer. And a painter. And whatever I feel like being today. Tomorrow it will probably be something different.

Because you know what? None of the labels matter. It’s just me and my art. Approaching each day as it comes, with openness and joy.


Well. If that doesn’t conclude my transformation of the last few months, I’m not sure what would. From the fear of change in October to the emergence of November to this acceptance that arrived in December. Completely unplanned, somehow my monthly Photo-Heart Connections tracks this dramatic transition to a new approach to my art. As I worked on my “eighteen months” project I was a bit shocked to discover that I hadn’t picked up my dSLR at all between October 22nd and December 14th, when I went out for my night shoot. I mean, I knew I hadn’t picked up my “big” camera for a while, but there was something about seeing it right there in Lightroom that was a bit shocking. And you know what? I didn’t care. Because I’m having so much fun with all of this! I’m going with it.

This month concludes the first year of the Photo-Heart Connection. It’s been an amazing practice! I’ve gained so much from it, as well as the community of people who have joined me this year. The guests posts from the last week have shared some amazing stories of connection, and I am truly honored to be able to play host to such a wonderful community of artists. I’m excited to continue for 2013. Who knows what will emerge?

To celebrate a new year of the Photo-Heart Connection, I’ve created a new button that better expresses my feelings about the whole practice. You can copy the code from the sidebar here.

kat eye view

And as a second part of the New Year celebration, I am going to give away a small matted print of this image, entitled “Windblown,” to one of the participants in this month’s Photo-Heart Connection. All you have to do to enter is to participate! So, what is your Photo-Heart Connection this month?


Filed Under: Photo-Heart Connection, The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: coast, mobile photography, Oregon, photo-heart connection, silhouette, tree

October 29, 2012 by Kat

Exhibition Blues

There is nothing more exciting that opening an email or receiving a letter that says, “Congratulations! The following pieces of art you submitted have been accepted into our upcoming show…” I do a little happy dance and enjoy the moment before I switch into execution mode to get the submission ready to hang.

Last week I got one of these emails that told me I had two works accepted into the Oregon Waterways show at the Giustina Gallery here in Corvallis. Yay! The works were Mirrored and Morning Wings, below.

Mirrored

Morning Wings

I had a third work I submitted, Explore with Me, that wasn’t accepted. I’m not entirely surprised, as it didn’t fit as well with their theme. It was my favorite of the three, though, so I submitted it anyway to see what would happen.

Explore with Me

As I prepared for this exhibition, I thought I would share with you what I’ve learned about exhibiting. I’ve only been on this journey of exhibiting for barely a year. The first exhibition I participated in was the Nature of Oregon exhibit with the PhotoArts Guild last November. Here’s what I’ve learned so far:

  • Participating in an exhibition is one of the best ways to really learn to present your work. You have to figure out how to print, prepare and hang the art. It’s a bit of a trial and error process, and I’ve evolved along the way, but there is no better way to learn than by doing.
  • Visit exhibitions before you start down the process to see how other artists present their work. What do you like? Not like? Jot down notes. This helps you know the direction you would like to go.
  • As a first step, consider participating in a “community open” exhibit or an organized group exhibit with a local guild or club. These exhibits usually don’t have a selection process, so they give you the opportunity to learn how to exhibit without the pressure of selection.
  • Selection for an juried exhibition is very subjective. If you submit a piece to an exhibit that is juried, you never know what might happen. It’s all up to the jury’s tastes and plans for the individual exhibit. Don’t get disappointed if you submit and hear nothing or a “no thank you” back. It doesn’t mean your work is awful, it just means that it wasn’t what they were looking for.
  • You are more likely to have work accepted if you submit to an exhibit with a specific theme than a general open call. Read the “call to artists” carefully and submit work you think best matches the theme. You can also be creative, submitting work related to the theme but with a twist, and see what happens. (My experience: That hasn’t worked out too well for me so far.) Don’t expect your favorite pieces to be selected because they are your favorites. The work you submit needs to be of high quality, but selection depends mostly on how well the piece fits what the exhibition is looking for.
  • Don’t expect to sell anything. If you do, consider it a fantastic bonus! Keep in mind that you will likely be bringing this piece home as you prepare your work for display. If it’s something you want to display in your home or give as a gift, go all out in the framing/preparation of it. If it’s something specific to the exhibition, however, and you don’t see it in your home, then you might want to think about how you can reuse the presentation materials. For my first exhibition, I had large canvases printed. They looked cool, but now what do I do with them? They don’t really fit my home decor and I don’t expect to sell them. Now I have amassed a stash of exhibition 16×20″ frames and mats, and can easily change out the prints as needed.
  • Give yourself plenty of time to prepare your work. Know your leadtime. If the timing is short between submission and exhibition, you should begin prep before you know you are accepted. Usually there is ample time between acceptance and delivery, but I got caught with this exhibition. I can print on demand and have the frames but needed more mats, so I was scrambling last week to order mats that could get here before the submission delivery deadline. The frame shops were backed up too, because other local artists were scrambling for the same exhibition. I ended up ordering mats that weren’t ideal and had to pay express shipping. If I had ordered the mats when I submitted for the exhibition, knowing I could always use them later, I would have had the mats I wanted without the extra cost. Grrr. But it’s all a learning process, and now I’ve learned one more thing with this exhibition.

Participating in exhibitions has been a great growth opportunity for me. It’s helped me learn to be more objective and less personally attached to my work as I submit. It’s helped me learn to present my work in a way that highlights the images but is also economical. It’s also driven me to learn to print, since I wasn’t happy with the prints I was getting, which has completed the cycle of creation for me.

Have you ever tried exhibiting your work? If not, I encourage you to consider it. There is nothing more exciting than seeing your work hanging on a gallery wall, visible to the public. Well, maybe selling a piece from an exhibition would be even more exciting, but I haven’t experienced that quite yet. 🙂

PS – Have you entered the big giveaway for my 1000th post yet? If not, visit here to enter.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: coast, exhibition, framing, Oregon, presentation

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