Tag: Oregon

  • Two more images June 2026

    Two more images June 2026

    And the official winning names are… (drum roll please)…

    Oregon Rainbow Connection (A) and Oregon Rowena Spring* (B). And Kara from @gilded_green on Insta gets a free small card of choice at any market she catches me at for helping me name the first one! (I’ll be tagging her on Insta tomorrow, Tuesday 6/16.)

    * ETA 6/17/26 – I changed my mind at the last minute on this one, from Oregon Spring TO Rowena Spring, because “Oregon Spring” felt too grandiose, and would prevent me from using it for any other image in the future that might better capture that title. So, Rowena spring, showing the beautiful wild lupin and arrow balsamroot in bloom. Apologies for any confusion!

    Photo showing a color photo notecard with a view looking northeast from Menucha Retreat center in Oregon of a rainbow beaming into a white cloud over the Columbia gorge against a blue sky.
    Oregon Rainbow Connection (A)
    Photo of a color photo notecard (labeled B) showing a lovely view from Rowena Point outside of Mosier, Oregon overlooking rolling hills covered in blue and yhellow wildlfowers. (Lupin and Arrowroot.)
    Rowena Spring (B)
    Colorful promo graphic with green middle on yellow about the Solstice Market June 20th from 12-5 pm at the Multnomah French Quarter 3518 SW Multnomah Blvd in Portland featuring Photograbee.
    Solstice Market Promo June 2026

    Everyone else gets $2 off any single small card (not in a set of 3) if you correctly tell me the winning name for Card A with the rainbow in person (without looking at the label on the back first!) at The Solstice Market coming up next Saturday June 20th at the Multnomah French Quarter 3518 SW Multnomah Blvd in Portland 12-5 pm. (Free admission, family-friendly, lots of food and crafts to be had!) And don’t miss our overflow location at Local Collective 7830 SW 35th just across the street and up one block with even more great artists and vendors! Definitely catch both spots!

    For those not following me on social media, you missed out on my plea for help naming these two images. I was struggling for unknown reasons -I’m normally pretty good at picking names. Not this time!

    I’m considering them to be part of my Scenics lineup (Line C) as I consider them to be gotten while traveling versus while studying bees and flowers in my neighborhood or garden more closely. Though yes, Oregon Spring features flowers. But they are our native wildflowers (blue Lupin and yellow arrow balsamroot aka “Oregon Sunflower”) viewed from Rowena Point out near Mosier off I-84 east of Portland in 2011.

    The rainbow appeared as if by magic at the end of a long rainy weekend of music making at the Menucha Retreat Center just as the faculty concert was starting. Everyone else headed into the concert (rightly so), but I saw the sun break out below the cloud layer just then too, so I chased the light over to this view and voila! A rainbow beaming down right over the Columbia River as I looked northeast from the campus. (Cue choir of angels.)

    Yeah, I was late to the concert and caught heck for it, but can you blame me? This is NOT photoshopped! Just lightly color-enhanced. It was this magical in person. (Menucha Retreat Center is on the old highway overlooking I-84 and the Gorge just west of Vista House at Crown Point for those familiar with the area. You can get to the old highway out of Troutdale, just east of Portland. You won’t see this from I-84, which puts you below the cliffside.)

    Okay, back to bees-ness. I’m out of hummingbirds~! And need to print some larger Oregon Rainbow Connections! See you soon, hopefully! (In cooler weather too, phew.) – Jan Mon 6/15/26

    Photo showing two color photo notecards one above the other. The top one shows a rainbow beaming down into a white cloud over the Columbia Gorge as viewed looking northweast from Menucha Retreat Center in 2010. The second shows blue and yellow native wildflowers from Rowena Point outside of Mosier, Oregon 2011.
  • A teaser of prints to come…March 2026

    Although my new customers love the prints I’ve been offering for the last six months, I’m getting a few repeat customers now. And thought I’d freshen things up a bit by adding a few new images.

    Including my first new Scenic shot that is not Multnomah Falls, smile. (Yes, we love my frozen falls shots but variety is nice too!)

    Photo of a print of a close-up photo of Mt St Helens in the summer 2024. It's partly snow-covered in soft sunlight. View is south into the dome.
    Mt St Helens close

    I have many many more where these came from, I just lack the time to process and produce everything yet. But I’m squeezing it in as I can.

    These will first be available to buy in person at the April Radical Harvest Market in SE Portland. And on eBay if I can get my stuff together!

    Dueling coneflower prints in salmon, peach and orange hues.
    Colorful coneflowers 2025

    I’m also breaking in a new printer as my trusty old one finally spit out her parts, forcing my hand. And am back in touch with my old friend, fine art printer Jim Dittmer of JDA Creative Color. (He came to see me at the last Spot Market 3/14-15.) He hasn’t retired, he just closed his storefront in inner southeast Portland making me think so! Nope! Still going strong out in Gresham, just east of Portland. Check him out if you need any fine art scanning or printing done. He really knows his stuff, along with his son Matt.

    I’m printing up to 8×10 myself still at home, but hope to have larger fine art prints and posters with Jim’s help soon. (No dates set yet, but for sure by this Christmas.)

    Shot of a colorful mix of joyful prints - a due of bright orange california poppies on top of a macro of a honey bee in a yellow flower on top of a black printer.
    Colorful mix coming

    Ciao for now – Jan 3/23/26

  • Winter markets I’m attending 2025

    I just hatched an Upcoming Shows page to share my growing winter market schedule with you all as I suddenly started to get booked up! (I had to do some juggling for a minute as some of the markets collided with each other, phew!) Keep up with the latest news always on all my socials here:

    Anyway, in case you don’t find that page, know that you can catch me THIS weekend,Saturday December 6th at Woodmere Elementary School for their Winter Bazaar 11-5. Located at 7900 SE Duke, Portland, OR 97206. Free, we have warm refreshments and a raffle and a scavenger hunt too! Park in front of the school off Duke, enter in the middle, and find loads of super crafty and talented artists and vendors in the cafeteria, and ALSO in the gym! (Don’t forget the gym! – I’ll be just left of the gym entrance after you enter.) I’ll be debuting my first 5″x7″ prints too ($10 each), thanks to the kind staff at Art Supply Store (formerly I’ve Been Framed) on SE Foster who helped me find proper packaging. (Thank you!) Come and see!

    Then I’ll be at the Clackamas County Gleaners Christmas Bazaar NEXT Saturday Dec 13th, from 10-4 pm 13821 Fir Street, Oregon City, OR 97045 (just off 213)*. Free, not sure if there’s a raffle, but pretty sure we’ll have refreshments. Dress warm, it’s in their unheated warehouse where they sort all the gleaned food they save for hungry families in the area. This is an amazing program that literally saves tons of perfectly good food from grocery stores that would otherwise be tossed. I’ve seen it, and it’s amazing. (I’m picky, and don’t like anything too old, and I was blown away by what they saved back in 2019! If you live in the area, you should check them out.)

    *Note this is a change to the previous address I had (I just caught the update on Facebook! Eek! It was 13895 before, and now I have to update all my marketing materials, sigh.) Onward…

    Then, last but not least (for now), on Sunday 12/14 12-5 pm I’ll be at the Spot Market in the old GAP store space in the Lloyd Center Mall next to Macy’s on the second (middle) level. (Not at the east end by Marshall’s as my flyer mistakenly read, sorry, my bad!) They have killer refreshments (wine and hibiscus tea) and an hourly raffle for all shoppers that buy something. The Food Court 5000 may come through once or twice too – they’re a dedicated bunch of joyful mall walkers who start up in the 3rd level food court and cruise around the whole mall with loud jazzy music!

    There’s lots going on at the Lloyd Center that whole weekend, so don’t be too distracted, and forget to stop by and see us! :)

    a colorful floor plan showing the Spot market in the old GAP store location next to Macy's in the Lloyd Center
    Find the Spot Market by Macy’s on the second (middle) level of the mall

    Hope to see you here or there! Jan – December 5, 2025

  • The sleeping bees are coming to eBay and more! 11/1/25

    The sleeping bees are coming to eBay and more! 11/1/25

    I’m going to start listing the Sleeping Bees duo of cards I just shared in my last post on eBay starting November 1st too! (I was just working out shipping details.)

    ETA 6/23/26: I just finally managed to get some video uploaded and working in the blog, so I’m adding it in below! And I plan to refresh things on eBay soon too. (I’ve neglected them in favor of craft markets, for better or worse.) Now back to the original post…

    Their origin story is so hilarious! I dragged myself to my community garden on July 16th, 2025 (it was around 97 degrees F that day – too hot for me and the garden) to water my poor thirsty plot, and slid over to the Gaillardia (red and yellow blanket flower) patch as per usual. But I only had my phone camera on me, as it was so hot. (I live in the same range as butter: when it melts, I melt.)

    Anyway, that’s when I encountered the FIRST image below, where no less than six longhorn bees were snoozing sweetly away in a perfect circle around the center of a single Gaillardia flower blossom, swaying peacefully in the breeze. Totally unbothered. Bums up. Shown here:

    Photo of a notecard made with a photo of six longhorn bees sleeping neatly and sweetly away around the center of a red and yellow Gaillardia flower.
    Sleeping sweetly July 16th

    I snapped several shots and took a little video to prove this was NOT Photoshop nor AI! (I rarely use either, honestly.) Here’s a small snip:

    Dreamy sleepy bees

    So I swore I’d return the next day with my Nikon Z50 to see if I got as lucky again. Well, the laugh was on me! Because there was not one single bee sleeping sweetly away in any fresh fully open Gaillardia blossoms like the day before – oh no. That would be too easy, Jan. You had your chance yesterday!

    No – they were all clustered up twerking while clinging to the tattered petals of a bedraggled, spent (mature) Gaillardia blossom, also swaying gently in the breeze, looking like a biker gang after a bender! LOL! Here you go:

    Ahh… I laughed so hard! That’ll teach me – ALWAYS have your camera on you, silly! But, if you don’t, the best camera (as always) is whatever you have on hand at the time the image presents itself. (Yay for quick reflexes.) Here’s that image I’m calling “The After Party”:

    Photo of a large notecard with a photo of a gang of longhorn bees dangling from the tattered petals of a bedraggled Gaillardia flower. Looking like they were on a bender.
    The After Party 7/17.

    Ahhh… people love both images separately for different reasons I’m finding. As well as the pair together, for the contrast. (I have all three sizes available now.)

    Update: Get them from me live at markets, else on eBay for now 4/23/26.

    PS I’m lining up multiple holiday markets, but not all are confirmed yet. Some may get confirmed at the last minute so stay tuned on my socials (see links below) for late-breaking updates. (I try to keep this up to date, but don’t always succeed.) Cheers.

    Jan and the Sleepy Bees October 29th, 2025.

  • Catch the Sleeping Bees at Spot Market 10/12/25!

    I always bring a pack of my small photo notecards with me when I’m exploring potential markets and stores. And almost every time I go out. It’s so hard to convey their incredible colors otherwise.

    I did just that, when I headed out to find the new to me “Spot Market PDX” in the Lloyd Center Mall in NE Portland, Oregon yesterday, Saturday the 11th. Silly me, I didn’t read the notice closely, and ended up stumbling on an entirely different but equally wonderful small artisan market – the Spectrum Market, for the LGBTQIA community. It was also wonderful, so many great artists with loads of cute and useful things, and whimsy. I highly recommend it! But, being straight, they weren’t so interested in me.

    It also took me over 30 minutes to realize this wasn’t the SPot Market! Which uses a lot of ladybugs and spots for their marketing. Indeed, the vendors and market manager confirmed it was upstairs as they began packing up at 5 pm.

    So I headed upstairs, and lucky me, I caught the last hour of the Spot Market after I found it all the way at the east end of the mall, near the old Marshall’s store (near NE 15th) on the left. And I bumbled in again. And met some more wonderful vendors and artisans. Who all raved about my cards. And even bought one!

    But I kept sharing my sleeping bees photos from last July, with the sweet shot and the “After Party” shot cued up in my photos (after I found it again – I take a LOT of photos all the time)! And then they announced there were two vendor openings the next day (Sunday Oct 12th). And the lovely watercolor artist I was with nudged me to inquire. I did, and they said “come tomorrow!” Boom! that simple! (Well, I did show some of my cards.)

    I was so inspired by this wonderful development, and the interest in my duo of sleeping bee images, that I stayed up way too late tonight (last night), and went ahead and developed the images and produced the first cards featuring them shown here:

    Photo of a notecard made with a photo of six longhorn bees sleeping neatly and sweetly away around the center of a red and yellow Gaillardia flower.
    Sleeping sweetly July 16th
    Photo of a large notecard with a photo of a gang of longhorn bees dangling from the tattered petals of a bedraggled Gaillardia flower. Looking like they were on a bender.
    The After Party 7/17.
    Photo showing a pair of small colorful photo notecards, one in portrait view the other landscape featuring the sleeping bees from the other two shots.

    I haven’t even been able to update my online catalog just yet, things are happening so fast! I’m not unhappy – just trying to keep up! I feel a bit like the bees in the “After Party” shot in the middle above, which is the shot I got the next day after I went back with my Nikon to try catching them sleeping sweetly again.

    No dice! Lol. They gave me the finger, and were ALL clustered on that poor bedraggled Gaillardia shown. Not a one was in the still fresh flowers that were still available. Oh no. Nope. They looked like a biker gang on a bender, giving me the bee finger! That’ll teach me to forget my camera! Ha ha!

    As I told someone again, the best camera to have is the one you have on you when the opportunity (shot) presents itself. Don’t underestimate your phone cameras folks! You can see the results are nothing to sneeze at!

    Speaking of which, the images above aren’t the best because I had already packed up my spot light that helps brighten them up. I’ll try to produce some new, better ones soon, hopefully. I’ll also try to get some up on eBay right away too.

    Oh yeah, you can also get Multnomah Falls from me IN PERSON! Else just at Crystal Heart Boutique in Hillsboro for now. Cheerio.

    Editing 6/23/26 to see if I can upload and play video yet. You should see ten seconds of the sleepy bees if so:

  • Only available at CHB for now (Oct 2025)

    While I do plan to make some copies of my award-winning Multnomah Falls shot available on eBay, right now they are only available to buy as small cards at Crystal Heart Boutique in downtown Hillsboro, Oregon. (269 E Main Street. The MAX Blue Line stops one block away!)

    Aerial photo looking down at the front side of two small photo notecards featuring upper Multnomah Falls frozen (including the Benson bridge) on the left, and the lower falls frozen on the right. A wooden ruler shows beneath for scale.
    Aerial shot looking down on two photonotecards featuring frozen Multnomah Falls. The upper falls with the Benson bridge is on the left, the lower falls on the right. A wooden ruler shows on the left for scale.

    Grab them while you can! They are one of my most popular images. Especially for out-of-town guests and friends.

    They’d make great gifts for Christmas too!

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