Category Archives: Photography

Bay Area Adventures

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Earlier this month I was out in the SF Bay Area (aka one of my favourite places ever).  After doing the Photo Walk in Portland earlier this year, I thought it might be fun to put out an invite to come join me in one of my favourite places in San Francisco, the Mission. It’s so full of gorgeous murals, colour and gorgeous light and I thought it might be fun adventure for Bay Area folks to feel the permission to get touristy in their own city and take selfies!

It was SO awesome to get to meet and reconnect with all the lovely ladies there and I led the group through a few Be Your Own Beloved selfie activities.  It truly made for the perfect end to a really nourishing weekend.

Here are a few snaps of our photo adventuring (and the selfies I ended up taking during the walk)!

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Behind the Scenes of my Favourite Selfie Photo Shoot Spot

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Want to know more about what happens behind the scenes of a Selfie Photo Shoot?

I’ve shared a some behind the scenes before like this one where I share all the outtakes of a photo shoot but in this case I really wanted to tell you  a bit about finding a location for a selfie photo shoot.

I know it’s easy to see a photo someone takes and assume it was simple and easy.  Or that in order to you to make that happen you’d have to go to that perfect spot, on a really good hair day in that outfit that you have yet to find, on a day you really feel good about your body. Then it becomes one of those things on our list of someday…right?

It’s easy to think that everyone is finding these dreamy locations right? But we aren’t. Most of us are making the most of the places we can find and are just going for it.  Thats truly the difference in between someone with a camera full of awesome photos they took for their business or blog and those who don’t!

So here’s a bit of the behind the scenes about how I make this one work for me!  But first, let’s break it down.

It looks serene doesn’t it?  Like I’m in a forest way out in the country.

You’re hearing birds chirping and the wind blowing through the trees, right?

Not so much.

Here’s the truth.

I ride my bike out to this spot and park it, seeing what exact spot seems right on this day.  To the right of me in the photo is a small creek with this trail built beside it.  It’s lovely and thankfully not so picturesque that this is a really busy spot.  To my left is a small patch of forest.  While its lush enough to be a backdrop for photos, for much of it I can see through to the gigantic office buildings on the other side.

Behind me, and at the other end of the path are two very busy roads. So I don’t hear any bird chirping or wind blowing.  It’s beeping of horns, car doors slamming in the office parking lots just past the forest.

While it is a generally quiet path, every 5 minutes or so someone comes by running or taking a walk on their lunch.  They generally don’t ask too many questions, but it isn’t completely quiet.  There is also a path along the other side of the creek but I often forget that it is there until someone is walking by on the other side, with me in full view jumping and twirling in front of my camera!

But it’s a place I can get to, on my bike that while it may not be perfect, or as serene as it looks…it doesn’t need to be the perfect spot to be a great place to rock a selfie photo shoot.

Why? Because  if we wait for a place that is ‘perfect’ or totally serene…we’ll keep putting this off until ‘someday’ but really the imperfectly awesome location might be exactly what we need to take those photos that will help us rock our blog our business!

I hope this might make you look around you a bit differently and spot some selfie photo shoots you might otherwise overlook!

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A Selfie Photo Shoot!

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After launching the brand new class How To Rock a Selfie Photo Shoot yesterday I wanted to share a bit about how and why this came about!

As you know, taking selfies is practice for me that has helped me see myself with kindness and been a tool for body-image healing.

Alongside that, I’m also running a business, right? I need images to use for my classes and while I get a plethora of them participating in Be Your Own Beloved each time as well as going on my weekly photo walks, it felt exciting and inspiring to set a little time out every once in a while to do a Selfie Photo Shoot!

I love getting to help people have photos for their blog or business launches, so why not offer that to myself too, giving myself the experience that I offer my portrait clients.  And it is much more simple than you might think.

As I’ve been teaching Be Your Own Beloved, I’ve been thinking about these photo shoots and how they are really a gift we can give ourselves.  Because while getting a portrait session done is truly a gift we can give ourselves, it doesn’t ONLY happen when we pass the camera over to someone else.

We can do this for ourselves too.

I wanted to share one of these selfie photo shoots with you!  This one happened last summer and I had been asked by the awesome Susan Tuttle to contribute some images to her new book as well as taking some photos for some upcoming projects.

So I went on an adventure to make it happen.  I headed out to a small yet quiet path along a creek about a 20 minute bike ride from my house (yes indeed, this is meant to be fun so why not take the bike)!

I brought my tripod, DSLR as well as my iPhone.

I set it up the tripod and started getting playful in front of the camera using some of the activities I’ll be sharing with you in this class.

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And then came home having so many photos that I could use for Susan’s book as well as my upcoming courses (like for the Beloved Beginnings class I launched soon after that).

I even ended up using one for an online dating profile!  I’m pretty private about that part of my life at this point but I did want to step out of my comfort zone and share that in case that is something that you’d really love to have portraits for. I know I used not having photos as a reason not to do this for a while even though of course I have TONS of photos of myself.  But I had concluded that I needed to have photos taken by someone else.  Yup, I do that too…use ‘not having photos of myself’ as a reason not to say YES to parts of this beautiful life.

You don’t even need a reason (like a launch or an article) to do these photo shoots! You’ll simply have these photos ready for the next time you need a great photo of yourself and you can say YES without hesitation!

I hope this gave you a glimpse into the fun we’re going to have in the How to Rock a Selfie Photo Shoot class too…I can’t wait to get started and when you sign up I’ll be sending you an activity to get you started before class begins!

Come join in on the Selfie Photo Shoot fun!

Is Using a Filter on Your Self-Portrait Hiding?

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When we use filters on our selfies as we share them online…are we hiding?

Are we using those filters to mask ourselves? Or are they artistic expression?

Is using a filter a bad thing?  Is it more ‘truthful’ to not use a filter?

When I started teaching Be Your Own Beloved, these questions came up in discussions with some of the participants.  It was so intriguing to me, as I hadn’t thought of using filters as hiding…but I was interested in why that was a pretty common experience for a lot of the folks in my class.

Now…if you aren’t familiar with what I mean by ‘filter’, it is anything that we layer on top of a photo.  Some apps provide filters (like Instagram) that are a combination of effects that alter the photo.  Other apps like Pic Tap Go allow you to add all sorts of features one by one.  These layers might be things like brightening the photo, changing the colour & tones, adding some texture or a border.  Much like you might layer effects in something like the website PicMonkey.

My exploration of photography began just as the most basic camera phones were emerging (let alone options to use filters) and as I started to explore using a digital camera, I noticed the way that everyone else’s photos seemed so much brighter than mine so I went on a mission to figure out why this was.  I learned about photoshop and got playful with it, as well as websites like PicMonkey (well, in that era it was called Picnik).  I learned about how to change contrast & add colour and my photos finally had the same vibrancy that everyone else’s seemed to.  I most definitely fell head over heals with using texture and layers on my photos too.

So when iPhones and Apps & filters emerged I was thrilled that it was now way easier to add a little spark to our photos!  Not only that, but using filters allows us to discover our own style.  Do we love black and white photos? Or a little bit of brightening to our face in the self-portrait?  Do we love adding a layer that almost looks like fog or softening to our photos?

Quite honestly, it never felt like hiding to me, but I absolutely want to honour that for some people it does.

To me, it felt like these filters were now going to make it so much easier for me to get creative with my self-portraits and to take a photo that I might have thought was okay and transform it into something I felt really proud of, within seconds.

As a portrait photographer, this is part of the process…picking out which images have that extra spark or let your client shine.  Then we process your photo deciding what changes help the photo shine even more.  The tools portrait photographers use are reflected in a lot of those filters that you might use on Instagram.  Adding a brightness, or more contrast, adding a texture or turning it into black and white.

This is part of the fun of taking photographs and yes, self-portraits…figuring out which one lets us shine.

In fact, I think a filter can often be a way that we can take a photo that may bring up old stories of how we see ourselves and help shift it into a photo that we might be able to really see ourselves with kindness in.

Plus, the thing about self-portraiture is that:

We get to decide when & how its taken.

We get to pick which one out of the many we took feels like it lets us shine the most.

And we get to choose what we want to do before sharing it.

Its vulnerable to share our photos online too…so in my opinion, filter or no filter…pushing past that vulnerability is something to be proud of!

It seems like a creative, empowered choice to share our photos online and process them in a way that makes us feel good about the photo.

You didn’t stop yourself from taking it…

You didn’t delete it after taking it…

You chose to share it and let us see you  Sure, sometimes when we use filters, it might blur out parts of us or add so much texture that we might be less visible in the photo.  But I hope you’ll ponder that in fact this might not be hiding after all.  You still are getting creative with it and sharing it…and all of those layers and the choices you made in getting creative with them is a way of letting us see you too, through your style of processing the photo.

Perhaps if there is a filter that really feels like a safety net to you, something that you do feel like you hide behind…maybe there is another filter out there that is similar in the tools it uses, but that could feel like a filter that helps you shine, rather than hide?

And is posting a photo filter free…better?  This is a longstanding conversation in photography in general…but to be honest, I don’t feel like posting a self-portrait is better filter-free.  It might be a way we can step out of our comfort zone (which is SO powerful) to share a photo filter free, but I don’t think it disvalues the ones we do add a filter too.   As you might have noticed, I’m not really into seeing some self-portraits as ‘better’ in general (a foot photo being less valuable than a full body self-portrait for example.  Both are brave)!  If you don’t use filters…awesome! If you do…thats awesome too!

My personal style of using filters these days has become much more subtle than when I first started using them, but I almost always add a little something to a self-portrait to help it reflect the vibrancy that I want it to hold.

I thought I’d bring up this subject today in case you feel like each time you have a filter on a photo, you aren’t being truthful enough by sharing it filter-free.  Lets go of the idea of using filters of hiding.  I happen to think it is brave creativity in action.

Lets re-work the idea of filter as being something that we ‘hide’ behind to being something that helps us shine, that invites us to feel more confident sharing our photo & seeing ourselves with compassion.  So lets use our filters with pride today…and if you do, please tag it with #beyourownbeloved so I can cheer you on!

How do you feel about using filters on your photos?  I’d love to open up a conversation in the comments here about this subject…and I’d love to hear from you!

Re-Sparking a Love Affair with my DSLR

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Last year was the year of the iPhone over here!

I most definitely took more iPhone self-portraits than DSLR photos, primarily because as I teach Be Your Own Beloved I like to participate alongside the participants with my iPhone rather than my DSLR…as the journey in that class isn’t just about how fancy your photo is…it is about telling your story through your camera (any camera…yes, even a cell phone camera).

Every month at some point I’d get out with my DSLR (if you’re wondering what gear I love, there is a post all about it over here), but after years of it being my primary way of documenting the world around me in that magical way that a DSLR can do…I confess I missed it!

I’m craving to re-spark a love affair with my DSLR.

So this year I want to make an effort to bring out the big camera more, both to document the world around me, step into the frame and I’m so excited to do more photo sessions too!

The other day I donned my thrifted cowboy boots and took my camera to the community garden and it was surprisingly quiet so I found myself feeling free to take lots of photos in some spots at the garden that are usually busy!

Here are a few photos from that adventure!

How about you?  Do you favour your cell phone camera over a DSLR?  What is your favourite camera to shoot with?

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