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Fidalgo Island

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Fidalgo Island

About an hour and a half north of Seattle is Fidalgo Island, nearly parallel to the isolated San Juans and boasting a lush, walkable park at its southwest corner, Washington Park. Last weekend, my fiancé and I changed up the quarantine monotony and took a socially distanced hike along the Fidalgo Head Loop Trail (and a few of its various branches) through dense forest and along craggy heights.

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The trail’s view across the Burrows Channel is one of the most striking things I’ve seen this close to Seattle.

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Although all trail documentation online listed the park’s loop trail as easy in difficulty and fairly level (with elevation gain of under 300 feet), don’t be underprepared footwear-wise like I was. The trail is very flat across extended distances and suddenly extremely steep in short bursts, and the rocks along the cliffsides have very little purchase. There is loose dirt throughout, making some steps tricky. Definitely wear your regular hiking shoes if possible.

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We left the park well in advance of sunset, but it’s on my bucket list to come back and see this shoreline during golden hour. Sunset Beach is angled slightly to the west, so I’m sure incredible light is guaranteed.

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Elliott Bay

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Elliott Bay

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A gray, partly cloudy view of Seattle from the Bainbridge Island ferry, en route to Bainbridge’s Chilly Hilly 2020 cycling event.

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EYE // PHONE.

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EYE // PHONE.

a casual guide to developing an eye for elevated phone photography

“An eye for elevated phone photography is an asset worth developing. It might come in handy for a job or for personal branding, for capturing moments in a true-to-experience form, and best of all, for its perspective-altering potential. What’s more, cultivating this skill can get you to a place where you regularly and instinctively locate all the beautiful and exceptional elements in your everyday life with profound appreciation and gratitude. It’s a tool with great practical and emotional return. Who wouldn’t love to see more beauty in our lives, and get the most out of every memory we document? It begins with developing a photographer’s eye.”

Hit the link below to read our latest free resource on casual photography:

Read the guide

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