The Artist's Eye:
Insights & Articles

Elevate Your Photography and Sketching

Welcome to The Artist’s Eye—your free resource for deepening your skills in photography, urban sketching, and visual storytelling. I’ll take you beyond the basics, sharing the expert techniques, compositional theories, and location-specific tips that I use in my private workshops.

Dive into my articles to master Dutch light, simplify complex scenes, and transform your work. Start learning now, and take the next step toward defining your signature style.

A person sitting at a wooden table with a camera, glasses, and an open sketchbook featuring watercolor paintings of European-style buildings near a canal, outdoors with a cityscape in the background.
J. Watrous J. Watrous

The Power of the Pause

In our travels, we rush from landmark to landmark, accumulating photos but often failing to genuinely connect with the space around us. We are collecting postcards, not creating true memories.

As your mentor, I teach that the simple act of putting pen or brush to paper is the most powerful method for embedding a memory. It is the ultimate antidote to the "tourist rush."

When you commit to a 15-minute sketch, your brain moves from passive viewing to active, intentional engagement. You must analyze the light, the angle, and the color. Because you actively process line and structure over time, the memory you create is deeper, richer, and more detailed. The finished sketch is a tangible artifact of that deep experience.

Stop rushing past the magic. Invest in a skill that forces you to pause, observe deeply, and create a truly authentic artifact of your journey.

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J. Watrous J. Watrous

Ten Creative Ways to Use Sub-Framing

Sub-framing is one of the most powerful compositional tools you have to control where your viewer’s eye goes. In its simplest form, it means using an element already within your scene to create a "frame" around your main subject. This technique immediately draws the viewer into your story, adding layers of structure, depth, and essential context to your travel photographs and urban sketches. While the classic examples involve windows and doorways, your imagination is the only true limit to what you can use as a frame.

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J. Watrous J. Watrous

Develop Your Artist’s Eye

Your eye is a muscle—and training it to see light, composition, and authentic human interaction is the single best investment you can make in your travel journey.

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J. Watrous J. Watrous

Looking with Layers

Every trip is a complex tapestry of light, activity, and feeling. Yet, it’s easy to return home with images that are flat, one-dimensional, and fail to convey the richness of the moment. You've collected a postcard, but you haven't captured an authentic memory artifact. The secret to moving beyond the generic snapshot is a technique called layered composition.

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