Look & Find the Critter in the Photo. Difficulty Level: Hard Read more
Look & Find the Critter in the Photo. Difficulty Level: Hard Read more
In this third and final installment of the series, Lupa Greenwolf discusses how to create your own Altar of Curiosities, including some considerations you might not have thought of. Read more
More FIRE!!!!!! by Violet Kyuubi Would you like to see your nature-inspired photography and other artwork here on Wordless Wednesday? Contact us at pathsthroughtheforests[at]gmail[dot]com with a photo and link of the piece you’d like us to consider. Read more
A Saegoah's Way of Celebrating The Longest Day of The Year. Playing with light, movement, colour and celebrating the youth coming into their own. Read more
Sacred Waterfall by Marika Schirmacher Would you like to see your nature-inspired photography and other artwork here on Wordless Wednesday? Contact us at pathsthroughtheforests[at]gmail[dot]com with a photo and link of the piece you’d like us to consider. Read more
Lupa discusses in detail what defines an Altar of Curiosities: a collection of natural or otherwise noteworthy items that are valued both for their intrinsic qualities as specimens, and whatever spiritual qualities their curator ascribes to them. Read more
Look & Find the Critter in the Photo. Difficulty Level: Easy to Medium Read more
The Altar of Curiosities is a system that's very much based on my relationship with the land and its denizens. Each memento keeps alive the connection I made to the place I brought it from, and the altar as a whole is like having a direct line to each of a circle of friends; all I have to do is pick up my end. Read more
Hawk Moth by Estruda Would you like to see your nature-inspired photography and other artwork here on Wordless Wednesday? Contact us at pathsthroughtheforests[at]gmail[dot]com with a photo and link of the piece you’d like us to consider. Read more
When I've analyzed my own experiences, I've found that they are seen the way they are because I've framed them that way in my mind. When I remove my preconceptions of what I'd like Nature to be, what I find is that Nature is indifferent and impersonal, and I like that. Read more