For the Love of Blue + Postcard Giveaway and Swap Update
So, I go to Greece to take pictures of white houses and blue sea. Which I did, and I enjoyed. But as I shared in Monday’s post, the things that inspired me the most continued to be the places with texture, the colors, and little details like this door handle and lock. I captured this in the small town Megalochori when we rented a car one day and visited some of the smaller towns around the island of Santorini. Once you got out of the tourist zones where everything was postcard-perfect, Santorini was texture heaven. Just goes to show, style will always come through. You’ve probably heard the saying: “No matter where you go, there you are.” Even artistically, this is so true. (I’m linking this in to The Creative Exchange for that reason!)
Today I’ve also got a lot of little updates so hang on through the end if you are interested in a Liberate Your Art Postcard Swap update, my Paint Party Friday entry, entering a postcard giveaway and a quick newsletter tip.
Liberate Your Art Postcard Swap Update and Postcard Giveaway
I’m so excited with the response to the postcard swap. There are 87 people signed up for the swap so far. That’s 435 pieces of art that will be winging their way around the world come late July. Isn’t that awesome? And it’s all because you are helping me get the word out! Thank you so much!
If you’re already signed up, you can expect an email this week with some more ideas and resources about making or printing your postcards. If you have some resources or tips you want to share with the group, send them to me and I’ll add them to the update. If you haven’t signed up yet, there’s plenty of time. Go here to sign up and get the details.
To thank you for the great response to the swap and your help with growing it, I’m doing a postcard giveaway, to liberate more art into the world. There will be two winners. I’ll be giving away a set of my own “Favorite Flowers” postcards, as well as a set of “Superhero” postcards from my good friend Jenny Shih. Any one of these postcards is guaranteed to make the recipient smile.
Even better, you can have up to three entries into the pool. Here is what you need to do to enter:
1. Comment on this post for one entry. Just say hi and you are in!
2. If you are a signed up for the postcard swap, you get a second entry. Leave a second comment on this post that you are signed up, for your second entry. It’s not too late – sign up here and then come back and use this entry!
3. If you have helped get the word out on the postcard swap (a blog post, a tweet, putting the button on your blog sidebar, etc.), you get a third entry. Leave a third comment on this post telling us what you did to help get the word out, and provide a link if you have one, for your third entry. It’s not to late for this either – if you help get the word out between now and Monday, come back and comment again.
I will draw for the winners on Tuesday morning here in Italy, so you have until Monday night around midnight EST to leave your comments. Please make sure that there is a way for me to get at your email through your comment – either by a link back to your website where I can find it or commenting with a method that will allow me to reply. If you win and I can’t find your email to contact you for the address, I’ll re-draw for the prize.
Quick Newsletter Tip
My newsletter will be going out on Sunday, with the Visual Contrast printable file I told you about in yesterday’s post. Be sure to add my email address to your address book so it doesn’t end up in your spam folder. If you signed up but don’t see it by Monday morning, or didn’t see the first one I sent a couple of weeks ago, check your spam folder.
Paint Party Friday!
I had so much fun participating in Paint Party Friday the first time a couple of weeks ago. That, along the wonderful blues I experienced in Greece last week, have motivated me to start another painting. This is a small 20x20cm canvas, painted in acrylics. I haven’t finished it yet, but thought I would share my progress.
Step One: I wanted to get a watery looking background so I used quite a bit of water with Cerulean blue paint to initially paint the background. Then I crumpled a paper towel and dabbed at the canvas to unevenly take paint away. It was an experiment, and I liked the results.
Step Two: I started painting a circle of Aquamarine, from the outside in. I still used quite a bit of water and overlapped as I went. Eventually I worked to the center and then spiraled out, darkening the places that seemed to be naturally dark. I had no intention with the subject, but the result at the end of this step look like a rose to me.
This is all I’ve done so far. Next I’m planning to go along with the emerging rose I see and add some highlights. We’ll see where this goes in future updates. It’s funny how both this painting and the last one I did have ended up looking like flowers, that was not intentional.
Have a great weekend!!
The Next in the Series
OK, here it is. The third in the series I showed you yesterday. This is another image found on the streets of Parma. I’m toying with calling this series “Classic Italian” but we’ll have to see how it forms up. So far, it seems to be classic red vehicles on the streets of Italy near some sort of grocery crates. I don’t know if that will hold, but who would have thought I would have three of these? We’ll see what I find next week, when we visit Sicily.
The Exploring with a Camera: Breaking the Rule of Thirds link is now closed. The winner of the “C is for Camera” journal is Michelle, who goes by Pixie Dreams on Flickr. Congrats Michelle! Thanks so much to all who linked in, it was great to see all of these wonderful images. Don’t forget to visit Tammy Lee Bradley at Bliss and Folly to see who won the Vintage Camera trio.
Come back tomorrow for the next Exploring with a Camera post, this week we’re going to Capture the Sky!
Share Your View: Breaking the Rule of Thirds
What have you discovered in the last week since the Exploring with a Camera: Breaking the Rule of Thirds post? Do you follow or break the rule of thirds most often? Link in below and let’s take a look! I saved this image from Via dell’Amore for today because it was a perfect illustration of the rule of thirds along with the love-lock tradition I talked about in yesterday’s post.
When you link in your examples of following and breaking the rule of thirds in the link below, and you have two chances to win. I’m giving away the “C is for Camera” notebook below and Tammy Lee Bradley of Bliss and Folly has joined in to giveaway a Vintage Camera trio – head over to her blog here to see how to enter for her fabulous giveaway. Thanks so much Tammy for sharing the love with us!
So, without further ado, please share your view! Link in below or click the thumbnails to see the other great examples shared so far. Thanks so much for participating! You can find the code for the Exploring with a Camera button here, if you want to share the love on your blog too.
Sharing the Love
This week is “Sharing the Love” week on Mortal Muses, have you caught it yet? Each muse has selected a guest to take her place and share the love – it’s been great fun! Come by and see all of our guests musing on the theme “Evidence of Love.” My special guest is JennifĂ©e, a wonderful photographer from Norway. I love her images! You can find her post here.
My wonderful muse friend, Tammy Lee Bradley of Bliss and Folly, is also sharing the love with me and with you too! She is offering a giveaway of a vintage camera trio on her blog when you link in to Exploring with a Camera: Breaking the Rule of Thirds. So there are two giveaways if you link in this time! Visit Tammy’s blog to see the details of the giveaway, and then come link in here. Thanks so much to Tammy for sharing the love with us all!
In the last week, I’ve had three wonderful bloggers give the Stylish Blogger Award to me. I would like to thank them so much for sharing the love with The Kat Eye View of the World and Exploring with a Camera. Please stop by and leave them some love in the form of comments too!
Christine at Blue Elephant Photography
Beth at Rainbows’n’Frogs Photography
Karen at Out in the Fields
Today’s “evidence of love” is from Via dell’Amore in Cinque Terre. If you ever wanted to find love-themed graffiti, this is the place. Enjoy your weekend!
Exploring with a Camera: Breaking the Rule of Thirds
Welcome to another Exploring with a Camera! This week I’m exploring the “Rule of Thirds,” looking at how this rule works and when to break the rule.
The Rule of Thirds is simple:
1. Divide your frame into thirds horizontally and vertically.
2.When framing your image, place your subject on one of the lines or intersections created by the thirds.
The Rule of Thirds is a guiding principle that can help you create interesting visual compositions. Calling it a “rule” is a complete misnomer – it’s no more a rule than any other compositional principle. It is more of a suggestion, an idea to keep in mind while your create. Composition is a complex subject and relies on so many aspects working together, you can’t just state one principle as a “rule” to be followed all of the time.
As I’m taking or cropping photographs, I don’t actively think about applying the Rule of Thirds or any specific compositional principle. I use my eye to gauge what might be a good composition, which takes into account all of the different things going on in each individual photograph. I experiment with various compositions of the same subject. It is interesting for me to see, after the fact, what principles I might have unconsciously applied. This type of review helps me to understand where the principles do and don’t work for me, which in turn will help me create better images the next time I go out and shoot.
If you are new to photography and trying to learn composition, thinking about the Rule of Thirds as you shoot or crop can help you see how it works and where you might successfully use it in your images.
I’m going to go through a number of examples that consider the Rule of Thirds to see whether an image follows the rule exactly, partially or not at all. It was an interesting exercise for me, because it was more difficult than I thought to define if an image partially followed the rule or broke the rule. Here are the definitions that I came up with:
- Following the Rule of Thirds: If the focal point (main subject) of the image falls exactly on a third line or intersection, it follows the rule.
- Partial use of the Rule of Thirds: If the focal point is close to a third line or intersection and has the appearance of following the rule, it partially follows the rule.
- Breaking the Rule of Thirds: If the focal point is nowhere near a third line or intersection and doesn’t have any appearance of following the rule, it breaks the rule.
I loved how my crop of this image came out exactly on the rule of thirds. The main subject, the woman walking out of the building, falls on an intersection of third lines. The reflections trail away along the horizontal line. There is a lot going on in this image to explore, but the rule of thirds works very well here.
I truly thought this image of a leaf on wet pavement followed the rule of thirds. That’s what I was going for when I cropped it. Look how far off it is from the intersection! This goes to show that balance of the elements – the leaf versus the pebbles and reflections – comes into play as well as the rule of thirds.
The ceramic plaque in this photo below from Burano is more centered than on any third lines. The composition was created to capture the plaque in relation to the elements surrounding it, the window and the door, and their relative colors.
In one of my all time favorite images of Venice at night, I can’t find any relationship to the rule of thirds.




























