another view {life}

How many pictures can I take of the same of the same view? More than this, I promise. I took you to our beach last week, and it's past time I get us back around the world and share some shots from our trip to Greece and Italy back in June.

The resort where we stayed was near Olympia, right on the Ionian Sea. I have some pictures of the resort, and some funny stories about it too, that I'll share with you soon, but first I want to show you this glorious water.

We had some waves the first day, but they were little, even by the standards of what we refer to our Atlantic Ocean: Lake Virginia Beach. After that, placid skies and placid seas. Bracing water. I'm not sure if it was the time of year or the weather pattern that met us there, but the skies were soft, almost hazy, every day, even with low humidity. We could just make out mountains rising from the water, far in the distance, and occasionally a cruise ship would hulk slowly off shore.

The water changed color daily and was always crystal clear. Shallow and buoyant beyond belief, we marveled at how easily we floated and how far down we saw our wiggling toes.

Cal forcefully took on the water every chance he could. He kayaked every day. He swam, he dove. I met him in the water, moving more slowly, but so grateful for each buoyant float. I'm a floater more than a diver, I suppose.

Every day I walked the curve of land that hugged our hotel. Turn left, you hit the resort. Rows of white umbrellas waiting for families to take cover. Turn right and almost immediately you're in rural, coastal Greece. Fishing families with ragged homes perched along the shore. Tarp covered patios, barking dogs. These are no coastal hideaways. Fancy and designed for vacationers. These are the homes of working men and women. Scrappy and held together with twine and wire.

I always turned right when I went to walk.

The day after we learned that Violet died, I took this walk, my feet sinking into cool sand, the calm sea a gentle slap against the shore. It was glassy, smooth and serene, balm to my breaking heart. I walked all the way to that tiny cove, where boats bobbed and one lone swimmer broke the surface with a steady stroke. If I ever needed a message that the sea and the sand starts to heal me, this walk was it. I was still heartbroken, my emotions were still raw, but with this water alongside me, I was walking on.

photo camp {still + life}

You've probably noticed that posting has been different around here, and sporadic at best. Eh. It's summer. And I'm tired. ;) I think I've abandoned my Five Things tradition, no one reads on Fridays anyway, and even once fall hits, I imagine I'll have a different regular schedule for programing. It's all good. Things evolve. Hopefully I evolve too.

Despite the fact that no one seems to read on Fridays, I wanted to pop on and just breathe a sweet sigh of, "oh it was fun," about my Teen Photo Camp. I'm not going to lie. I was dreading it a little. Much like when I have a migraine, when you don't feel good, it's hard to get excited about doing anything, but Erica pointed out last week maybe that teens see everything with such fresh eyes that I was sure to have fun, and she was right. This was a great bunch of kids (even the girl who said on the first day that she was only there because her mom made her come), and they took some really awesome photos.

At Photo Camp we don't talk camera settings or aperture and shutter speed. It's all about composition and light and learning to look around you. To my mind it's all about the fun. We have lots of scavenger hunt,s and the kids learn the basics (because that's all I can manage) of Photoshop to edit their pictures. I have one kid who should really be in my Intro Class for adults. He's passionate. (With an age range of 12-16, you'll get outliers.) I told him straight up on the first day that we'd be below his pay grade, but I brought my 50mm lens in for him to try out, and he's been over the moon. It's been fun to watch him get absorbed and completely ignore me.

So today we'll print our photos for a show that MOCA has to celebrate the creativity that comes out of each summer's Art Camps and have another scavenger hunt and play around with some still life. And then (dusts hands), that will be that. But oh, it was fun. I sure hope they keep taking pictures.