Nature Vision Magazine - Issue 9 (Summer 2025)

Hello NPN Community,

Our latest issue of Nature Vision Magazine (Summer 2025) is out! We’ve poured a lot into bringing you diverse voices and stunning visuals, and now we’d love to hear from you.

  • What was your standout article or interview in this issue?
  • Did a particular photograph or project capture your imagination?
  • Were there any themes or ideas that particularly resonated with you?
  • Do you have any general feedback on the issue as a whole?

When discussing a specific article, please @mention the author (if they’re on NPN) or include the article title and author’s name from the PDF’s Table of Contents. This ensures authors see your comments and helps keep conversations focused.

Your feedback is invaluable. Let us know your thoughts!

Access Nature Vision Magazine - Issue 9 (Summer 2025) Here

2 Likes

@Peter_Morrissey , I enjoyed reading your interview. I love that storyboard you share with your grandchildren, and see the same humor there as you share in your posts here. My mother had Parkinson’s, so I can relate a little bit with what you shared. Your photography is all the more inspiring. All the best!

Hi Mark
Wow, thank you for those kind words.
Peter

Loved the @Chrissy_Donadi piece. Really resonated with me as a mom, wife, family planner, and jack of all trades! Photographers wear so many hats! Shooting days are my solitude. And, for someone that has moved a lot, I understood the comparison between temporary local vs long-term resident. But no matter the place, nature is what binds us together and I enjoy documenting the places I’ve been through photography. Nice to know there are others out there experiencing the same thing!

1 Like

@Brenda_Petrella Hi Brenda. I found your article interesting because I’ve had difficulty warming up to doing stills of moving subjects. It’s not that I don’t appreciate some of these abstracts. It’s the process of making them that doesn’t do it for me. It seems to me that you don’t see what you’re trying to achieve when you take the image and therefore shoot many in the hope that some will come out looking good. For someone who values looking and finding something meaningful to shoot it seems to me that this approach removes the very process that makes (for me) image making so satisfying. It seems to me that the image making you describe emphasizes the creative process that takes place after the image is shot rather than what precedes it. Would you agree with that?

Hi @christinedorresteinphotography – your comment really means a lot. It’s comforting to know there are others navigating similar roles and rhythms while still carving out space for creativity. Nature has a way of binding us no matter where we land and offering the solitude to recenter amid life’s chaos. I’m so glad the piece resonated with you, and grateful to know there are kindred spirits out there documenting life in motion. (P.S. thanks for your patience on my reply - I’ve been on holiday with the family and doing my best to be fully present).

1 Like