Yoga and photography share a common thread—both invite us into presence, awareness, and the art oftruly seeing. In this 3-hour workshop, you’ll explore how the principles of yoga—focus, observation, balance, and alignment—can transform the way you capture images using your smartphone. You’ll learn simple, practical techniques for improving exposure and composition, while also developing a more intuitive, artistic eye.
We’ll explore essential tools already available on your phone, along with a few favorite free and low-cost apps for editing and organizing your images. The experience will include time to move, observe, and practice—allowing your creativity to unfold naturally. Come ready to slow down, look closer, and stretch your inner artist.
This workshop is offered as a gift to our past and current retreat participants. CENTER community members are warmly invited to join for $45.
We hope you’ll choose to stay afterward for light refreshments and a BYOB cocktail—an opportunity to reconnect, share, and enjoy time with fellow retreat-goers and community members.
When: SATURDAY, may 2, 2:00 - 5:00pm
Where: Clinton - 36 Nod Road
Fee: $45- FREE to past and present retreat participants
ONLY 25 SPOTS AVAILABLE - IN STUDIO ONLY!
click here to sign up
Workshop Cancelation Policy: Non-Refundable. Due to limited space, we request that you cancel at least one week before a workshop. This gives us the opportunity to fill the event. You may cancel by phone or by email. If you cancel before the one week, you will receive an account credit towards any future purchase. Unused portions of workshop series are non-refundable.
Bridget grew up in Iowa, exploring the world through a plastic Kodak 110 camera. She studied creative writing at Northwestern University, photography at the Salt Institute for Documentary Studies, and earned a Master’s in Arts in Education from the Harvard Graduate School of Education. Blending writing, photography, and education, Bridget helps organizations and individuals tell meaningful stories through both still and moving images—work that is rooted in connection, curiosity, and purpose. From 2018 to 2025, she worked as a producer for PBS NewsHour Student Reporting Labs, and previously as a videographer for the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. Bridget now works as a freelance storyteller and welcomes new collaborations.