Choosing art for your home can feel surprisingly difficult.
Not because there is nothing available, but because so much of what looks good in a shop, online, or on a screen does not quite work once it is on your wall. The scale feels off. The energy feels wrong. The piece fades into the background or starts to irritate you over time.
These practical considerations can help you choose art that truly belongs in your space.
1. Stop Choosing Art Only From a Screen
Art is often chosen online, quickly, and at a distance. Screens flatten scale, exaggerate contrast, and remove context.
Before committing, ask:
How large will this feel on my wall, not just in theory
How does it behave from across the room, not just close up
Will I see this most often in passing or while sitting still
If possible, visualize the piece in the actual room. Tape out the size on the wall. Notice how it feels at different distances and times of day.
2. Choose for Where You Spend Time, Not Where You Entertain
A common mistake is placing the most thought into rooms meant to impress.
Instead, prioritize spaces where you spend the most time alone or unwinding. Bedrooms, hallways you pass through daily, reading corners, or the wall you face at the end of the day benefit most from art that supports calm and focus.
Ask yourself:
Where do I want to feel more settled
Which room still feels unfinished emotionally, not visually
That is often where the right piece belongs.
3. Pay Attention to How the Art Affects the Room’s Energy
Art does more than fill space. It changes how a room feels.
Notice whether a piece:
Pulls your attention aggressively
Creates visual tension
Or allows your eye to rest
If a room already carries a lot of movement or stimulation, art that is quieter often works better long-term. In calmer rooms, slightly more dynamic work can add interest without overwhelming the space.
4. Consider How the Piece Will Age With You
Art is not seasonal decor.
Ask:
Will I still want to live with this in five years
Does this reflect a phase, or something more lasting
Would I regret rushing this decision
Pieces that rely heavily on trends, novelty, or bold statements often feel dated faster than art chosen for atmosphere and depth.
5. Trust Repetition Over First Impressions
If you keep returning to the same piece, that matters.
Art that truly works tends to linger in your mind. It does not always impress immediately, but it stays with you. Repeated interest is often a better indicator than instant excitement.
If you forget about a piece as soon as you leave the page or gallery, it may not be the right one to live with.
6. Let One Strong Piece Do the Work
You do not need to fill every wall.
Often, one well-chosen piece can resolve an entire space. Adding more art too quickly can dilute the impact and create visual clutter.
When in doubt, stop at one and live with it. You can always add later.
Choosing With Confidence
Choosing art that works in your home is less about rules and more about attention. Paying attention to how you live, how you move through your space, and how you want to feel when you are there.
When those factors lead the decision, the right piece tends to feel obvious, not forced. If you would like some guidance on choosing art for your space, please send me a message!
Grab a tea or coffee and settle in. Here’s the story behind my newest collection.
Some collections arrive with a clear plan.
Saltwater Rebellion did not.
This collection began with a pull toward the coast. Not because I had a perfectly mapped-out idea, but because I needed space. Space to breathe, to slow down, and to reconnect with myself in a season that felt full in every direction.
So I took a solo trip to Tofino and Ucluelet.
No dramatic artist retreat. No perfectly curated creative reset. Just wind, salt air, long beaches, and the kind of quiet that lets you hear yourself again.
That trip became the beginning of Saltwater Rebellion.
The Poem at the Heart of the Collection
Alongside the photographs, I wrote a poem that became part of the foundation of this collection. It gave language to what I was finding at the shoreline and within myself while creating this work.
Saltwater Rebellion
by Bri Vandyke
the sea calls to me in patternsthrough tide, wind, and sun
it moves without askingpulling forwarddrawing backreshaping the shoreline
where land gives way to watersomething in me recognizesthat same motion
a wideninga gatheringa turning overthen return
I was not madeto hold one shapefor comfortfor approvalfor expectation
the sea does not ask permissionto riseto recedeto begin again
to move is to changeto change is to becomeand in that living tideI’ve found my place
I wrote this poem during the creation of the collection, and it became a way of naming what the work was really about. Not just the ocean, but motion. Change. Return. The quiet refusal to stay fixed inside other people’s expectations.
Why the Title Fits
The title Saltwater Rebellion fits because this collection is its own kind of rebellion. Not loud or chaotic. Quiet. Intentional. Strong.
It is about choosing presence in a world that rewards speed, noise, and constant output. It is about resisting the pressure to rush through life and choosing to slow down enough to actually feel it.
Honestly, that feels a little rebellious these days.
What the Ocean Gives Me
The ocean has always been more than something beautiful to look at for me. It steadies me, but not in a soft or delicate way. Sometimes it calms simply by being bigger than whatever I have been carrying.
It does not ask for performance. It just asks you to arrive.
There is something about standing at the shoreline and watching the tide move in and out that makes everything feel simpler and truer. The sea does not ask permission to shift. It rises, recedes, reshapes, returns.
And somewhere in that rhythm, I recognized something I needed to remember myself.
I was never meant to stay fixed.
I do not need to hold one shape for comfort, approval, or expectation.
Becoming is allowed to be fluid.
How the Work Was Made
Every image in Saltwater Rebellion was created in camera using intentional camera movement. That matters to me.
I do not want to manufacture movement later on a screen. I want the motion to be real, shaped in the moment by light, tide, instinct, and response. The camera moves as I move. The image forms in real time.
Sometimes that gives me exactly what I hoped for. Sometimes it gives me something better. Sometimes the ocean humbles me a little, which, rude, but fair.
These are not static records of a place. They are responses to being inside it. They hold movement, atmosphere, and feeling rather than simply describing what was there.
The Mood of the Collection
Saltwater Rebellion was shaped on west coast beaches at sunset, where colour never sits still for long. Blues soften into purples. Gold skims across wet sand. Sky, tide, and shoreline keep shifting until everything feels layered with motion.
Some images feel spacious and quiet, like an exhale. Others feel moodier, more electric. Together, they reflect the rhythm of the shoreline and the reason I keep returning to it.
I wanted this collection to feel immersive. Not empty. Not decorative. Alive.
The Personal Story Beneath It
This collection also carries pieces of my own journey as an artist.
I have always been drawn to nature, light, and the experience of photographing something that feels bigger than myself. Over time, that became less about documenting what I saw and more about creating something expressive and immersive. Vancouver Island deepened that even further. This landscape changed me and shaped the way I see.
But this collection came from something more personal than scenery.
It came from needing space to return to myself.
From wanting to step outside routine, pressure, and expectation long enough to hear what was still true underneath all of it.
That is why the poem is so deeply tied to this work. It was never an extra. It was part of the becoming of the collection itself.
Building the Collection
This body of work did not come together all at once. It unfolded over repeated visits, through editing, refining, and paying attention to which images truly belonged together.
That is one of the hardest parts of building a collection. It is not just about making strong individual photographs. It is about creating a body of work with rhythm, cohesion, and emotional depth.
Some images made the cut immediately. Others surprised me. A few I loved had to be left behind. That is the less glamorous part, but it matters.
Over time, the heart of the work became clear.
The Real Rebellion
This collection is about more than the ocean.
It is about permission.
Permission to slow down.Permission to follow instinct.Permission to change.Permission to choose depth over distraction.
It is about remembering that softness is not weakness, stillness is not wasted time, and presence can be powerful.
That is the real rebellion.
Who This Collection Is For
Saltwater Rebellion is for the people who feel something at the shoreline they cannot quite explain. The ones who stay a little longer. The ones who are drawn to the ocean not just for its beauty, but for the way it shifts something in them.
It is for the people who want art that brings atmosphere, motion, and a sense of return into their space.
Because that is what this collection holds for me.
Not the coast as a postcard. Not a perfect scene. But something lived, felt, and deeply necessary.
It also holds plenty of wind, damp shoes, sand in my car, and a complete inability to leave the beach when the light starts doing something interesting.
So yes, very glamorous.
Closing
Saltwater Rebellion is my love letter to the ocean, to presence, and to the quiet courage of choosing a slower rhythm when the world keeps asking for speed.
It is the story of returning to myself by returning to the shoreline. And in that living tide, I found my place.
I hope this collection offers a little of that same gift to you.
And yes, there was a beach selfie. Obviously.
Home should feel like a place to return to. A place to exhale. A place that reflects not only your style, but the atmosphere you want to live in every day.
That is part of what makes coastal photography so powerful in the home. It does more than fill a blank wall. It brings in softness, movement, and a sense of openness that can completely shift the feeling of a space. For those drawn to the water, the shoreline, and the quiet pull of the coast, art can become a way to bring that feeling indoors.
No guessing games here. I offer complimentary mockups so you can see the artwork in your space before you commit. Send me a photo of your wall, your measurements, and the piece you love, or book a Zoom call and we can figure it out together.