Kat Eye Studio

  • Home
  • Portfolio
  • Books
    • Art with an iPhone
    • Digital Photography for Beginners
  • Workshops
    • Mobile Photography Workshop Series
    • iPhone Art Workshop
    • Out of the Box Composition Workshop
    • Photography & Creativity Talks
  • Free Resources
    • Mobile Tutorials
    • Exploring with a Camera
    • Liberate Your Art Postcard Swap
  • Blog
  • About
    • Artist Statement
    • Background & Experience
    • Contact

January 22, 2013 by Kat

Quiet Power

Do you know, are you an introvert or extrovert? Do you get energy from being alone, or being with other people? I am on the introvert side, definitely. I need my quiet time and my space. I thrive with a good amount of solitude, and time to think. I will always choose small group interaction versus a big party. Add to that a serious case of shyness when I was younger, and I always felt I didn’t fit. I felt that there was something wrong with me, because I didn’t quite meet up to the social expectations around me. I remember as a teenager, being parts of a group activity or mixer, and discovering later no one remembered I was there. I felt invisible. But I knew, deep down, there was more to me, if someone would just take the time to look.

This feeling extended on into college and the working world. Thankfully, I chose to go to a private university with small classes in general and a tiny, fledgling engineering program. I got to know my fellow engineering majors well, because there were so few of us and we spent so much time together. One of my friends from college described me in this way: “You’re like a red hot chili pepper in a cool green salad,” he said, “You think you know what you are going to get and then OUCH! You take a bite.” I loved that description, because it was as if someone had finally seen me. The real me, hidden inside the quiet, calm exterior.

IMG_2846

But in each new situation I had to start again. I don’t think I said a word in a meeting my first year in the working world. Not one word. It’s amazing they kept me there! Slowly, slowly I learned to fit into this extroverted world I was living in. I gained experience, I gained confidence, and I gained a thicker skin. I learned to balance my alone time with social time, but I always felt a tension because I had the need for quiet time to think and recuperate. As if I was somehow less, for the need of it. I kept wishing that I could be the life of the party.

All of this comes up because I watched this TEDtalk from Susan Cain last week on the Power of Introverts:

I was in tears by the end of it. It felt as if she had finally validated who I was. That I was ok. That the quiet teenager and young adult I had been, the introvert I still am, is just a different kind of normal. That there is a benefit in being an introvert, not just a downside. There is a benefit to the time I need to think and explore. I can see that in my art, and here too, in my writing. I can see the time I spend in my head, the time I spend alone creating… that time helps my ideas come together into something bigger than myself. Something I can share with others.

Susan Cain gave this message to introverts in her talk, “The world needs you and it needs the things you carry.” I felt as if she were talking directly to me. Maybe the world doesn’t always need the life of the party. Maybe the world sometimes needs what comes out of the quiet power of deep thought. Maybe the world needs what I have to offer. As me, the introvert. I only needed to find a way to comfortably allow these ideas to come out. Which I have, through this blog. It allows me, bit by bit, day by day, to reveal the red hot chili pepper that resides within the cool green salad, which I’d never feel comfortable doing all at once with a big “ta-da!” There is a reason you don’t see me in video here or in my classes. It’s not just because I feel uncomfortable in front of the camera, although there is a little bit of that, it’s mostly because I love the time and space of writing and how it helps my ideas to form. It’s my medium, as much as photography. Both allow me to think and to process before I share.

Regardless of whether you are an introvert or an extrovert, I encourage you to watch the video. And think about how things play out in your life, your environment, your culture. In this age of bold personality, see if you can help encourage someone who doesn’t fit that mold to explore their quiet power. That someone may even be you.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: digital painting, Oregon, personal growth, silhouette, tree, video

January 4, 2013 by Kat

Why Create?

Why do you create? Do you know? Is there some inner drive that compels you? Are there external motivations?

This is a question I’m pondering for myself today. Why do I create?

20130104-062337.jpg

I create because I love it.
I create because it expresses something I can’t express another way.
I create because I learn about myself.
I create because it helps me understand who and where I am in this world.
I create because it brings me joy.

That’s why I create. It’s not because I’m in the business of creating. Because I want to make money from my creative work.

I’m pondering this question today because yesterday I was reading about a new class being offered that will teach about what kind of art sells, so that you can create work that is more commercially viable. This looks like a great class, but it didn’t resonate with me. This morning I sat down and considered why, and it comes back to the reasons why I create.

First, and foremost, I create for me. And if I ever shift that to create for others, whether it’s to sell more prints or gain more followers or whatever, then it seems like I will lose some thing essential in the work I create. Me. My connection to heart.

This is no small question to ponder, especially when you have a business that is linked to your art as I do with Kat Eye Studio. Your following is built on what you create. Part of the fears that have come up for me over the last few months, as I’ve been exploring mobile and more non-representational forms of photography, have been due to this. It’s such a dramatic departure from my old style, will people stick around if I change? Will I have to start all over and rebuild to get to this same place? They may seem like silly fears, but they are there.

What everything comes down to really is pretty simple. The whole idea behind my classes, the whole premise that led to Kat Eye Studio in the first place, is that when you create from the heart good things happen. You learn about yourself. You are happier. You are filled with gratitude for who and where you are. And yes, the quality of your work improves. Because that’s what I’ve learned, through my own creating.

My creative journey takes me onward. It changes me; my art changes too. As long as I’m creating from the heart, I know I will be in the right place for me. That may never mean huge commercial success or my art as my main source of income. Maybe I’m lucky to have the luxury that doesn’t have to be my goal or purpose right now. I think a lot of us have this same luxury: We can create what we want to create, without worry about selling our work for a living. There is a certain freedom in that.

Why do you create? It’s a good thing to stop and ask yourself this question once in a while. Ground yourself in the reasons why you create. Because as long as you stay true to your own heart as you create, you are in the right place for you regardless of how you answer the question.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: creative, mobile photography, Oregon, personal growth, tree

November 30, 2012 by Kat

Beyond “Hobby”

What do you call an interest that goes beyond “hobby?” When it becomes something that seems essential to your expression? When it’s a part of who you are? I’m trying to find the right word to use for my love of photography. The word I want is definitely not “hobby.” To me, that implies a side interest, something you do to fill your time. OK, I do that, but it’s become more to me than that.

Yesterday I met up with friend who was interested in learning more about my prints and how I was doing them. As we sat and chatted about what we were both up to, she used the word “hobby” for what I was doing and then kind of looked at me askance, as if she knew that didn’t fit either. I chuckled and tried to come up with a word for it, and I couldn’t.

I don’t have a word for what it is I’m doing with photography, and why. It’s as if it’s become an essential form of expression. I could stop teaching, if I had to. I could stop blogging, if you made me. But I don’t think I can stop photographing. Even if I had no one to share them with, I would still create photographs. It’s how I see and experience the world. It’s how I learn about myself. It feeds me energy and brings me joy. No matter what I try to do differently, even this whole mobile photography/digital painting thing I’ve got going on, it comes back to the essential element of the photograph.

Maybe I’m really just learning what it means to be an artist. I remember last year, listening to an artist talk about his journey and how, in his younger days, he was desperate to paint. Even when he had no money for materials, he found ways to paint. He had to, he said. He couldn’t stop it. I remember thinking, “Wow, that’s intense. I don’t feel that way.” But now I wonder if I’m starting to. If I already do.

Maybe being an artist, deep down in our soul, means not just that we do create, but that we need to create. That we can’t help it, can’t stop ourselves. There is something about photography that’s put it’s hooks into my heart and soul, and I can’t get away from it. Regardless of what else I explore, it always comes back to this for me.

So can you help me out? What’s the word I’m looking for, for this thing I’m experiencing? Because it’s way beyond “hobby” and I would like to put a word to it, if one exists.


There are several things going on I don’t want you to miss:

  • Today is the last day to enter for the Spark & Inspire eBook giveaway. You can enter by leaving a comment on this blog post.
  • Today is also the last day to link in to Exploring with a Camera: Chiaroscuro. Have you seen the gorgeous work that has been shared this month? Wow! Be sure to visit the links to see what your fellow photographers are creating with dramatic light.
  • The November Photo-Heart Connection link up opens tomorrow! What does your heart have to say this month? It’s time to find out. See you tomorrow!

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: artist, mobile photography, monochromatic, personal growth, reflection, tree

October 26, 2012 by Kat

Celebrating 1000 with Giveaways Galore

998… 999… 1000.

I’ve been watching my WordPress dashboard slowly inch toward 1,000 posts. One Thousand. Today.

For some reason, this seems like a pretty big milestone. Maybe it’s because I’m a numbers kind of girl, and I’ve just reached the threshold of 4 digits. Maybe it’s just because it highlights the enormity of how much I’ve shared here – one word, one image, one blog post at a time.

As a milestone, it causes me to pause and look at what this blog meant to me. This blog has become an important part of my creative process. Choosing an image and writing is something I do real time, each day, after I’m done journaling. It’s where the ideas that came out unfiltered in my morning pages start to shape up. It’s where my vision (photography) and voice (writing) converge. It tracks my progress and journey in a visible way.

The blog was started in late summer of 2008, when I found out I got the job that would take us to Italy. I thought it would be a good way to keep family and friends updated on the whole adventure. It’s become more. So much more. It’s been the place that I’ve slowly uncovered the layers of myself. Finding the color and texture that live underneath the dull gray exterior. Finding myself as an artist and as an imperfect human being. Being ok with who I am.

Peeling back the layers

And then add to that the connections… Wow. Incredible friends made around the world. People who are my kindred spirits and who get me at a soul level. It’s different kind of connection than I’ve experienced before.

I asked myself this week, as I watched the numbers change, “Can a blog change a life?” Yes, absolutely, it can. I’m in a incredibly different place today than I would have been, if I had not started this little blog 1000 posts ago. So much of what I have now, do now, am now, is because of what emerged here, one post at a time.

So… we are celebrating! Celebrating 1000 posts. Celebrating every comment and connection. Every image and discovery. Celebrating and thanking YOU for being with me along this incredible journey through life.


1000th Post Giveaway Galore

The numbers girl in me would love to give away 1000 things but that’s just too much! I’ve come up with a great list of things to give away though. Things that evolved from this blog; that matter to me and I want to share with you…

  • Grand Prize (1 winner): A class of your choice in 2013. Will you choose a Find Your Eye class or A Sense of Place? Or something new I’m adding in 2013? It’s up to you!
  • First Prize (5 winners): A matted print. You choose your favorite image of mine! It will come beautifully printed, signed and ready to frame – straight from my heart and hands to yours.
  • Third Prize (10 winners): A set of 3 printed postcards from my stash. You can keep them or share them with friends. You know I love postcards! Liberate that art!

To enter the giveaway, leave a comment on this blog post by the end of the day on Thursday, 1 November. That’s it! I’ll draw and notify the winners on Friday, 2 November.

Thank you so, so much for being here and for being part of this journey. It’s been an amazing experience getting to 1000 posts. Here’s to the next 1000!

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: giveaway, personal growth

October 25, 2012 by Kat

Addressing the “Shoulds”

What are your “shoulds?” Throughout the day, without even noticing it, many may run through your head:
I should call my mom.
I shouldn’t eat that brownie.
I should pay the bills.

Yeah. Lots of “shoulds.” They invade our artistic process too. We have a great discussion going on in the comments on yesterday’s post, and inevitably the “shoulds” have popped up there too. They do in almost any conversation about photographic process…
I should get it right in camera. I shouldn’t need to post-process.
I should use a tripod.
I should take a photograph every day.

What are your “shoulds?” I bet that you have some immediately that come to mind. We all have them. We carry them around, a lot of time without noticing them. And you know what? They drain us. They are an insidious way of saying, “I’m not good enough as I am. I need to change.” They are the voice of doubt. Fear in a subtle form. “Shoulds” are a nagging weight that pulls us away from our creativity and purpose, because instead of moving ahead with confidence they keep us chained to indecision, always questioning ourselves.

We need to address the “shoulds” and make a conscious decision on what to do with them. Make them to a “do” or “do not” and then move ahead. How?

  • First, you have to acknowledge the “should.” Write it down. Give it voice. You can’t address something if you don’t first consciously recognize it. Acknowledging there is a “should” does not make it truth. It just brings it to a place you can work with it.
  • Ask yourself, “Where did this ‘should’ come from?” Did it come from someone else? Who? Try and be specific. The statement, “I should call my mom” could come from internal means, you just miss your mom, or as a result of your mom repeatedly saying you don’t call her enough. The feeling “I should take a photograph every day” could come from your photography teacher or it could come from your own internal desires. Do your best to identify the source.
  • Next ask yourself, “Is this ‘should’ of value to me? Does it help me in some way?” The feeling we “should” do something can indicate that we want to learn something or grow in a certain direction. Look at it as objectively as possible. What is the outcome if you follow this “should?” It may mean you learn something new about yourself. Maybe more information is needed to answer the question, and that will define your direction. Ask yourself, “Do I want to follow this ‘should’?” If the answer is “no” or “not right now” then you will know your direction. The “should” may mean nothing to you, add no value, once you examine it in the light of day.
  • Make a decision. Ask yourself, “What is my choice around this ‘should’?” Move it to a “Do” or a “Do Not” and then set the “should” aside. If your “should” is, “I should be using a tripod,” decide if you will or you won’t. Maybe you need to practice with it and see what it brings you. Maybe you already have tried it and you know. Either way, make a choice and then move ahead. Write down your choice. Consciously say goodbye to the “should.”
  • Finally, give yourself permission to change your mind later. Nothing mires us in indecision more than the fear of making the wrong choice. But here’s the truth: You can always change your mind. Very few decisions are truly final. Thank goodness, or we would be living with choices we made in our teens or twenties that no longer fit our lives. If you struggle with the idea of changing your mind, thinking “I should stick to my decisions,” then maybe take a look at that “should” sometime.

None of these steps are easy, especially if it’s a “should” you’ve been carrying around a long time. It can be so ingrained you barely notice it. It can be difficult to tease out the source and what value it has to you.

It can be scary as hell to make our own choices, but we are always going to be the better off if we consciously choose our direction than if we live under the nagging doubts of the “shoulds.” Think of the parallel to our art. When we create photographs, we get to choose what is in or out of the frame. Our images will always be better when created with a conscious choice rather than a “should” picked up somewhere along the way. It seems so clear when put that way, doesn’t it? It’s the same with life.

So I ask you again… What are your “shoulds?” Start a list today. See how much these little things are hanging over your head. Pick one and work through the process. Let me know how it goes.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: Corvallis, Japanese Garden, leaf, Oregon, personal growth, rock

September 20, 2012 by Kat

Message Received

To put our art, our writing, our photography, our ideas out into the world with no assurance of acceptance or appreciation – that’s also vulnerability.
— — BrenĂ© Brown in Daring Greatly

I now know why I needed to hear the message from the universe yesterday. Why I started reading Daring Greatly this week. I’m having one hell of a vulnerability attack at the moment.

Let me explain…

This weekend is the Corvallis Fall Festival. After months of planning and preparing, I’ll be putting my art out there in the public eye, for sale, in a completely new way for me. It’s from the safety of a shared booth (4 other photographers along with me) and the safety of being close to home, but as I wrote out the email last night inviting friends and neighbors to visit me in the booth during the festival, I started to feel the fear. I started thinking, Why am I sending this? I don’t want to bother anyone with more emails. Will they even care? What if they don’t like my work? Maybe it’s better not to tell anyone. But I pressed send on the email anyway, despite my fears, because I know that most of these people want to see me succeed and will come by and support me even if it’s with a quick hi in the booth.

As I was reading this morning I realized where this feeling came from. I’m making myself vulnerable, by putting my art out there in a new way. And no matter how much I want and crave connection with people through my art, I also fear it. No amount of planning and preparing can eliminate that visceral response that comes from somewhere deep inside. The place that fears that I am not good enough. The place that fears rejection.

This vulnerability attack is made doubly strong by my trip to England next week. In the last couple of weeks, I’ve been stressing over what to wear for my workshops. I’m realizing now this is just a substitute worry for the bigger fear of putting myself “out there” in such a spectacular way. Want to know how the workshops happened? Earlier this year I said to myself, “I want to go to England and visit my friends! It would be cool to teach a couple of photography workshops at the same time.” And then started working on it. Once again, the planning and the preparing are the easy parts. It’s so, so easy for me to create a plan, a list of things to do, and check them off one by one. It’s a lot harder to deal with the emotions that come along with the actual event. Here I am, travelling by myself, staying with friends I know mostly from online interactions, offering workshops in a foreign country. Vulnerable? You bet.

With every step I take outside of my comfort zone, I open myself up to uncertainty, risk and emotional exposure. It just so happens that is exactly BrenĂ© Brown’s definition of vulnerability. I get it. I feel it, at my core, right now. Thankfully, these kinds of fears and emotions usually don’t come until I’m already committed, well down the road where it’s too late to turn back, so I keep putting myself out there in new and crazy ways. As I’ve said so many times in my writing here before, each little step you take expands your comfort zone. Whether it’s liberating your art as a postcard or in an art fair, it all takes courage and a willingness to be vulnerable.

I know intellectually that everything will be fine. Regardless of whether or not I sell a lot of my photographs at the festival, regardless of whether or not my workshops are full, I will have a good time. I will learn something in the process. I will grow.

Knowing it will all turn out ok doesn’t eliminate the feelings that exist today, right now, in my gut. But understanding where they are coming from, why being vulnerable has this impact on me, certainly helps. Thanks to the message from the universe yesterday, I was prepared for the panic attack of today. (Sort of. Talk to me about it tomorrow.)

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: Albany, allowing space, balloon, Brene Brown, Daring Greatly, Oregon, personal growth, risk, sky, vulnerability

« Previous Page
Next Page »
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • RSS
  • Twitter

Upcoming Events

Books Available

  Digital Photography for Beginners eBook Kat Sloma

Annual Postcard Swap

Online Photography Resources

search

Archives

Filter

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • RSS
  • Twitter

Upcoming Events

© Copyright 2017 Kat Eye Studio LLC