Can Nature Photography Help Improve Your Images?

Can Nature Photography Help Improve Your Images?

More and more, we are seeing headlines about how doctors are prescribing patients time outdoors. Ailments such as obesity, anxiety, and high blood pressure are just some of the issues nature can help with. As photographers, we spend more time than we care to admit in front of screens. This can lead to depression and other issues. A healthy mind and body are essential to every aspect of our lives—including our photography.

So, if you spend a lot of time shooting indoors, perhaps it's time to take your camera outside to some open spaces. In general, as a society, we have found ourselves spending more time indoors than ever before. Not only are we indoors more, our time is being spent in front of our screens. One news item that has been circulating a lot recently highlights how doctors in Shetland, Scotland have begun to prescribe long walks and bird watching to patients with chronic illnesses. While this may seem silly to some, there have been many studies that show the positive impacts of time in nature on one’s health.

In a recent article on CNN, Dr. Nooshin Razani of UCSF BEnioff Children’s Hospital Oakland explained that “studies have shown that within 15 minutes of being in nature, your stress level goes down, your heart rate [and] blood pressure improve.” She explained that: "Over the course of a lifetime, being in nature can lead to less heart disease as well as improvements in how long people can live."

But it’s not just adults that are spending less time in nature. Kids are as well. Long gone are the days when you drive through a neighborhood and find dozens of kids playing outside. In the book, Last Child in the Woods, author Richard Louv describes a child he met that disliked playing outside. The child explained to Louv that there are no outlets to charge his devices in the woods! 

As both kids and adults spend more time indoors, our wild spaces have less and less advocates. Getting kids interested in nature can help cultivate the next generation of ambassadors for our planet. But not only that, according to the Children & Nature Network, getting kids interested in nature can help sharpen their senses, improve their social skills and grades, decrease obesity rates, and reduce aggression. So, how can we get kids interested in nature again? Through photography.

We are all busy as heck these days, but finding a few hours each week to get outside and shoot should be a priority. Getting outdoors always feels good, regardless of what time of the year it is. Whether you are capturing some early morning rays or the birds buzzing around, shooting in nature can be a great way to keep active and improve your mood. And, of course, this will no doubt translate to creating better images.

Joanna Lentini's picture

Joanna's writing, photography, & trips focus on the natural world and our connection to it. Whether underwater or on land, she strives to capture not only the magic of our planet, but also the perils facing it. She is also the COO of the non-profit organization Oceans in Focus whose mission is to raise awareness about the plight of our oceans.

Log in or register to post comments
5 Comments

I think in general that’s true. But I live in LA and my idea of experiencing nature and my wife’s idea of experiencing nature are completely different. Escaping to the Eastern Sierra, disconnected from society is wonderful bliss for both of us, but prying her iPhone from her for 24-48 hours seems like an extremely daunting task...

I used to love going to Topanga State Park when I lived in LA. Nice place to go where you feel like you're nowhere near LA but it isn't a day's trip.

I haven’t been there in so long. Though, traveling north on the 101 from LA is certainly a treat

Great article

Great article and I believe its true, so much so that I try to incorporate it into the photography I do of nature.