Andy Porter Photography

Andy Porter Photography Photography Classes and Photo Tours, Fine Art Prints, Calendars and Greeting Cards are all available To us it was the Promised Land. Things felt different!
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About

Growing up in the north east I felt there was a subtle, nagging force pulling me westward. As a young teenager my friends always talked about heading to California, Colorado, Arizona, anywhere out west. We just had this idea that things were better “out west”. My first foray west of the Mississippi was to visit the Sawtooth Wilderness in Idaho for an Outward Bound program. I fell in love wi

th the mountains and backpacking. I returned back east, but not for long! A few weeks later I left home for good and hitchhiked out west visiting friends in California. And I knew that my future was somewhere on the pacific coast. Exactly where, I didn’t know. Returning back east again I remember seeing a NatGeo issue about the Pacific Crest Trail (I was in high school at the time), and that seemed like the dream of dreams. I showed the mag to some friends and recruited two to head out to Oregon to hike the PCT. We split up and hitchhiked out, meeting at a camp site just south of Cascade Locks. We backpacked most of Oregon on the trail and had a magnificent time. Over the next few years I continued traveling, hitchhiking through just about every state and visiting 13 countries in Central and South America. Again I wound up back on the east coast. I started to get antsy in just a few weeks, saw myself getting back in to old ruts and patterns. I knew I had to head west! So when a friend said she was driving out to Arizona and California, and was looking for a companion I signed on. That trip took us through many adventures and I wound up in Washington State for the first time. After backpacking trips in the North Cascades and the Olympics I was sure that the North West was home. But again I headed back east for family and work. I had narrowed down my choices on where to live in the NW, and in 1980 finally decided to head back out west to settle down. My plan was to visit Washington for a few backpacking and climbing trips and then head south and settle near Eugene, Oregon. But after the mountain excursions I couldn’t leave Washington! I wound up staying in the Seattle area for 15 years. Of course I made short trips all over the state but the one place that seemed to have a hold on me was Skagit County. Every time I drove north on I-5 and started down the hill into the valley I felt I was coming home. I just had a feeling that somehow I would wind up living there. But work and adventure pulled me away again. I left the area in 1995, and for the next seven years lived in Russia, Kazakhstan, France and Denmark. After my overseas travel I landed in NYC and worked/suffered there for three years. Each year I would fly out to Washington for a trip in the summer, feeling exhilarated and enthusiastic on the trip out west and depressed and miserable on the trip back! I’ve sort of felt like a compass that has been shaken around a lot. It takes sometime for the needle to settle down and point north. I visited 50 states, 5 continents, and more than 70 countries. It took nearly 50 years! But finally after all my travels I was able to come home. So, for me the question, “What does Skagit Valley mean to you?” is a deep one. It’s my home. It’s where I feel at home. I recall a song that said that home is a frame of mind. And that’s true, at least for me. I have lived in many places where I was happy with life: work, relationships, love. But I was not satisfied with my environment. Living in the Skagit Valley I am close to the mountains, the water, the forest. Even if I cannot go there every day I am so close I can feel them. And that feeling makes me calm and contented. They are with in my reach. Photography for me has always been bound with outdoor adventure. I never had an interest in taking pictures until I started to go backpacking. Then it seemed like a necessity, you know, the packing list was: backpack, tent, camera, sleeping bag, stove, food…it never occurred to me that you could go out on a trip with a way to capture the images. Of course taking pictures, good ones, is harder than it looks! But once you start to get the hang of it, what a joy! I have heard more than once that “You take nice pictures, you must have a nice camera.” (This still makes me smile) But I have always felt that a great part of taking beautiful pictures is going to cool places! And of course that’s what makes it so much fun! The planning, the trip itself, being there, in the outdoors, that’s the best part. Being able to capture some part of the look and feel of the place is an extra bonus. It helps to keep the memory alive and makes it possible to communicate some small part of what it was like to others. That’s what photography means to me! Now that I am living in Skagit Valley everyday is like a trip or excursion! There is always something beautiful to see. So taking awesome photos is as simple as remembering to take the camera with me when I leave the house everyday! Just knowing that possibility exists makes me smile! Share this:

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Spring is here!
05/02/2026

Spring is here!

This Wednesday is the last Andy Porter Photography Class until fall. This class will cover:How to capture images of the ...
04/28/2026

This Wednesday is the last Andy Porter Photography Class until fall.
This class will cover:
How to capture images of the Night Sky. We will cover everything you need to know: Camera settings, locations and tips on getting started.
WARNING: Capturing Night Sky images is addicting!
Focusing! We will cover Focus and Recompose, Hyperfocal Distance, Lenses and lots more!
Date and time: Wednesday, April 29 at 6pm.
Cost: $45
Location: Maiben House 219 S. Skagit Street, Burlington
Register for the class at Burlington Parks and Rec, link below
Registration: https://secure.rec1.com/WA/burlington-wa/catalog
Classes will resume in September. Have a wonderful summer!

Spring Photography Classes in BurlingtonThese are the last two classes until Fall!April 8, Wednesday, at 6pm How to use ...
04/07/2026

Spring Photography Classes in Burlington
These are the last two classes until Fall!
April 8, Wednesday, at 6pm
How to use your DSLR to Capture Awesome Images – Class 1
What the class teaches:

How to Shoot in Manual Mode
Aperture, Shutter Speed, ISO. These 3 settings will be explained in detail with lots of examples and images.
Depth of Field: You’ll learn how a photographer changes this in an image.
Bracketing Exposure is capturing multiple images of the same subject with different exposures.
A Circular Polarizer is an optical filter that screws onto the end of the lens.
Raw vs. Jpeg – We’ll discuss this as well as an overview of editing a RAW image file.

April 29, Wednesday at 6pm
How to Capture Awesome Images with your DSLR - Intermediate Level
What the class teaches:

Lenses and Focusing: Different lens focal lengths and what they are best for
You’ll learn the technique of Focus & Recompose
Sharper Images: Blurry images can be avoided by following one simple rule
Hyper-focal Distance: How to extend your depth of field in landscape images.
We will take time to practice these skills outdoors
We will cover in detail how to capture Night Sky images of the stars and Milky Way.

Classes are $45 each and are held through Burlington Parks and Rec. Follow the link below to see the details and register to reserve your spot:
https://secure.rec1.com/WA/burlington-wa/catalog
Both classes are held at the Maiben House, 219 S. Skagit Street, Burlington, WA 98233
Maiben House is on the east side of Maiben Park. near the grove of trees.

This morning's sunrise.
04/06/2026

This morning's sunrise.

Spring is coming!
04/02/2026

Spring is coming!

This came in the mail today from the publisher. Below is the image, Phelps Creek and Spider Meadows, Glacier Peak Wilder...
03/09/2026

This came in the mail today from the publisher.
Below is the image, Phelps Creek and Spider Meadows, Glacier Peak Wilderness.

The Winthrop Balloon Festival is this weekend. Friday Night Glow and Saturday Balloons galore!
03/05/2026

The Winthrop Balloon Festival is this weekend. Friday Night Glow and Saturday Balloons galore!

First Beach, La Push
02/19/2026

First Beach, La Push

02/16/2026

The Gallery in La Conner will be closed this week for a trip to the coast.
Will reopen on Thursday, Feb. 19.

Address

306 Morris Street
La Conner, WA
98257

Opening Hours

Friday 11am - 6pm
Saturday 10am - 6pm
Sunday 10am - 6pm

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