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September 12, 2013 by Kat

Shimmer and Shake

We are heading home from Eastern Oregon today. A long, hot drive across the state to home, but it has been a fun trip. Even though this is not my usual subject matter it’s stretched me and I have a number of photos that I will have fun editing.

One great discovery: There are aspens in Oregon. Growing up in Colorado, these beautiful trees have a special place in my heart. It made me feel good just to be among them. I hope these photos make you feel the same. I was even inspired to capture a little video, to capture the shimmer and sound of the leaves.

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Your browser does not support the video tag

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: aspen, Eastern Oregon, Oregon, tree, video

September 10, 2013 by Kat

Something a Little Different

I’m off in Eastern Oregon this week, for a photography excursion with some members of the PhotoArts Guild. Eastern Oregon is quite a bit different than western Oregon, you’ll note as I share photos. You drive over the Cascades and enter the “high desert” – quite an arid place.

This one of the dunes is my favorite from yesterday, edited on the fly in the car. We completely missed a restaurant dinner, we were so entranced with the evening light on the dunes. Good thing I packed peanut butter and jelly! We all agreed, though: It was totally worth it.

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Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: dune, Oregon, sand

August 29, 2013 by Kat

Lighter than Air (Mobile Tutorial & Giveaway)

The hot air balloon fun continues today! I’m having such a good time with these images from the balloon festival last weekend, I thought I would share a bit more with you today: A mobile tutorial of my latest piece and a print giveaway! Isn’t that a perfect way to kick off a holiday weekend and Paint Party Friday?

To enter the giveaway, just leave a comment and tell me which image you would like to receive if you win (images shown at bottom of post). Of course I’d love it if you subscribe to my newsletter, or like me on Facebook, or follow me on Twitter or Instagram… but none of that is required for entry. Just leave a comment. I’ll draw and announce the winner on my blog on Tuesday, September 3rd. Easy!

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And now for the steps to create this piece, called “Lighter than Air”…

It starts with the image captured Saturday morning, using Slow Shutter Cam to provide me with some motion blur:

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I’ve learned enough playing with balloon images this week to know that those little smears of balloons in the distance would be distracting in a final piece, so I removed them with the Retouch feature of Handy Photo:

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Now into Snapseed to brighten the exposure up. I could have done this in Handy Photo too, but I prefer Snapseed for basic adjustments:

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Next I started playing with textures. I decided that this one, out of Handy Photo, was starting to have the feel I wanted. Light, soft and bright!

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I also liked this texture, out of XnView FX, but the color was a little more yellow than desired:

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So I toned it down with a blend of the previous two images in Image Blender:

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Another texture of the original image I kind of liked was this one, out of Distressed FX:

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The “edginess” was great but the color was too strong and I didn’t like the way it created a bright hot spot in the middle, so… time to blend! Using my previously blended image (above) in Image Blender and the Luminosity blending mode I could get the edge effect without the distracting color. Be sure to play with your blending modes! You can do amazing things with modes like Luminosity at times.

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I decided I wanted to soften it up further, so I took the original adjusted image, and ran it through the chalk filter of Autopainter II:

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And then blended it with my image-in-progress. This not only provides softer edges, but shifts the color back toward neutral from the warmer tones it was starting to have.

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Looking good! It’s close now. I took this blended output and ran it through Distressed FX again. There were two versions I liked. The first one, for it’s crackly texture and the second one for the color.

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I brought these two into Image Blender for the final blend, and I’m done! The image met my desires… it’s soft and a bit dreamy, retains the brightness of the original color, and has warmth without an overall yellow cast. Here is the final image again:

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So much fun! I’ve soooo enjoyed editing these hot air balloon images this week. I like each new one I complete better than the last. Unfortunately, I’m nearing the end of hot air balloon images from the launch that I like enough to edit, so this could be the last. It’s too bad I can’t run out and take more starting images, since the festival is only once a year! 🙂


Giveaway Time!!

Leave a comment on this post and tell me which of the following four images you would like to receive as a print if you win. I’ll draw and announce the winner here on the blog on Tuesday, September 3rd. Have a wonderful weekend!

Liftoff

Liftoff

Dream Flight

Dream Flight

Postcard from the Air

Postcard from the Air

Lighter than Air

Lighter than Air

Filed Under: Mobile Tutorial, The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: Albany, balloon, hot air balloon, mobile tutorial, Oregon

August 27, 2013 by Kat

Inspiration in the Air

After a long week last week, I really didn’t want to get up super early on a Saturday morning to watch a balloon launch. I really didn’t. I mean, I had photographed it last year with success but was I really going to get anything new? Wasn’t sleep more important? But my husband set his alarm, and I figured if he actually got up and ready then we would go. Well, he did. He got up and wrangled us all out of the house to the Albany Art and Air Festival in time for the launch.

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And guess what happened… the fun of photographing a new subject took over. Armed only with my iPhone this year, I set out to see what I could do. I started with the standard still photographs, but it was when the balloons started launching and I switched to the Slow Shutter Cam app that I really had some fun. I could see that I was capturing some great possibilities. I played with movement and timing and direction. With moving balloons and a moving camera there was no opportunity for retakes, so I just went with the flow. It doesn’t take long for all of the balloons to launch – maybe 15 or 20 minutes – so before I knew it, it was over and I had ~150 new photographs on my camera roll.

What next? See what I could do with them, editing with some apps, of course.

And wow, that’s where the fun really began… Starting with this one, where I worked and worked to get the color and brightness just right. Don’t you love how the balloon just pops off the rest of the image?

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I thought it couldn’t get any better, but then I worked on this one, which I call Liftoff. The photograph was captured with that double exposure, I didn’t layer that. LOVE!!

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I was so happy with those two, I thought I would be done. But no… Here’s the next one, Dream Flight. This one is a composite of two images, playing around with the placement of the balloons relative to each other within the frame. I love the colors, and how the balloons just blend away into the background. Dreamy…

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As of yesterday, this last one was my favorite. But we’ll see if that holds, because each time I touch these photographs more magic seems to happen.

And here I wanted to sleep in. Ha! This was a good reminder: When given the option, which is more important, sleep or photographs?

Photographs, of course!!

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: balloon, dream, hot air balloon, mobile photography, Oregon

August 23, 2013 by Kat

A Sea of Green

Sometimes in the forest, I look up and feel as though I am under the surface. I can see where the term “canopy” in a forest comes from, because it feels as if there is a layer between me and the sky, sheltering me from the sun and rain. Who needs an umbrella or sunscreen? Not I.

For this piece, I wanted the leaves to be somewhat indistinct, forming a sea of green. All the better to highlight the shape of the trunk and the lines of the limbs, that gorgeous light sparkling through the canopy, and the feeling of being below the surface.

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It’s been a while since I participated in Paint Party Friday, so I thought this would be a great one to share. I’m wishing you all a fun and creative weekend!

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: forest, green, Oregon, paint party friday, tree

August 20, 2013 by Kat

The Whole Truth

The camera never lies, right? I wonder where we came up with this idea that the camera always captures truth. Where we picked up the idea that a photograph represents reality.

Maybe it’s because the camera gives a representation that seems like reality. Maybe it’s because the edges are sharp and the likeness to what we are looking at is closer than most art brings us. But what we what the camera captures is not truth. A photograph is not reality.

Reality encompasses a much broader range of the senses than a photograph can. Sight and sound and touch and smell. Reality encompasses a three dimensional world that is experienced with more than just the eyes. Reality is everything, everywhere in the moment. The whole truth.

A photograph starts with the photographer. As humans we can’t handle the whole of reality, so we filter. We filter based on our interests and our knowledge and our experience. We decide where to look, what to experience, out of everything that is available in our environment. So right there, we start to alter reality.

Next, we alter reality with our cameras. Think about it, we are taking a three dimensional world and collapsing it into two dimensions. We take the whole of the sensory experience and collapse it to visual alone. That’s a drastic alteration right there. Not only that, but as we study photography, we learn the camera itself is an imperfect tool for capturing even visual reality. It can’t capture the range of light and dark we see with our eyes. It can’t capture the form and the depth that we experience. So we learn to adapt through our exposure and optics and techniques. We make choices about the lens we want to use, the aperture and shutter speed, and what is in or out of the frame.

The photograph, as captured by the camera, is already significantly different from reality. The viewer can’t turn their head left or right and see what is happening beyond the edges of the frame. They can’t walk closer or further away. They can’t reach out and touch. They only see what the photographer has chosen for them to see. A slice of the photographer’s reality; a partial truth.

Then, we get into post-processing. It’s funny that this is often maligned as the part of the photographic process where reality is removed. In my view, post-processing is only a continuation of what we started with our cameras, since the as-captured image is not reality either. In post-processing, we can further adjust the photograph, to try to shift it to what we perceived as “reality” visually or to better express the feeling we had at the moment it was taken. We can create a new feeling with it, if we so choose. We can create an experience that is completely unrelated to our own experience when we took the photograph.

The “reality” that is presented in the final image is all in the choices made by the photographer, from the moment of capture to completion. It is not reality at all.

Take this photograph of light on the leaves in the forest, for example. The camera could not capture the shifting range of light and dark that I saw in those leaves. It could not capture the feeling of the breeze cooling my sun- and hike-warmed skin. It could not capture the rustle of the leaves, or the sound of my husband and son playing with the dog down the trail. It could not come anywhere close to my reality, but I did the best I could at capturing one thing: The light filtering through the canopy of leaves. I could find a scene that framed one single leaf in the light, and filled the background with the repetition of leaves in light and shadow. In my post-processing, I could add warmth through the tone, softness through a texture, and depth through a vignette. I could express my feelings about this one particular piece of my experience of that moment and that day. Beyond that, what you feel as you look at this photograph depends on your own reality and experiences in the past. Your filters and perceptions kick in, altering what I’ve presented further.

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Is this photograph the whole truth? No.
Is it reality? No.
A photograph never, ever will be.

I think it’s time that we leave behind the idea that the camera never lies. It’s time to shed the idea that in photography, alterations to reality come only in post-processing. The alterations to reality start in the photographer’s mind, and continue from seeing to camera to post-processing.

Instead, let’s focus on the one truth that we can express with photography: The truth of the experiences, feelings and emotions of the photographer.

Expressions of the artist, practicing their art.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: leaves, light, Oregon, philosophy, photography, reality, sunlight, truth

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