Understand nature journaling versus nature drawing or nature illustration/natural history illustration...
It can sometimes feel confusing to try to distinguish between nature journaling or nature drawing or illustration, particularly in the practicalities when you're making your drawings, so I wanted to try and clear things up a little bit so that it's easier to understand.
Of course, this is just my interpretation and we're all free to understand and interpret terms like nature journaling, nature drawing and nature illustration in our own way - but if you've been reading through the articles on this website and you're wondering what I'm referring to and what I mean, I hope that this will help to clear up what my interpretations are and how I'm using the terms and allow you think about how you would interpret these terms and what they mean to you.
If you're completely new to the term 'nature journaling', you might like to check out this page first...
We draw in our nature journals, so in that sense nature journaling can be nature drawing - but nature journaling is also so much more than nature drawing - and nature drawing can also be so much more than nature journaling...
Many nature journalers like to make a drawing or diagram of some kind in their nature journal entries, but you can also nature journal without drawing if you wish, and make your entries purely words or words and figures. Your drawings may also look more like diagrams than works of art, and that's absolutely fine.
For me, drawing in my nature journal is about the process of looking, noticing, and connecting with nature - I'm drawing to connect with and understand what I'm drawing. Some of my drawings look pretty good, and some could look an awful lot better, but I do try, very consciously, NOT to get caught up in trying to make a perfect drawing in my nature journal...
For a start, this would take too long. I do make drawings of nature outside my nature journal, and they can take multiple hours or days, so this is not practical for a fun nature journal where the purpose is to connect with nature for personal wellbeing. So I need to make a quicker drawing that will likely be not as accurate and not as detailed.
Secondly, sometimes it's nice just to draw for fun like the way I did when I was a child and I wasn't worrying about making a drawing as perfect as possible, I was just having fun - so I don't worry about measuring and detail and just look and draw and make mistakes and correct my mistakes and if I'm lucky, I'll have something that's recognizable as what it is. There's also the fact that all the hours of drawing practice over the years helps too!
Some people do like to make finished nature drawings and paintings in their nature journals and that's great as that's the way they choose to do it, but for me that's not what my nature journal is for...
I want to make a quick drawing that I can just enjoy doing and while doing it feel connected to nature - that's why I started my course 'Imperfect Nature Journaling' to remind us to enjoy what we're doing and not worry about making it perfect and turn this down-time enjoyable thing into another stress or way to judge ourselves!
It's not a case of not caring about what we're doing or not trying to make it look good - a large part of the drawing we make is looking at what we're drawing and trying to make our drawing reflect what we're seeing. In truth, we're practicing our drawing skills every time we draw, but because we're drawing for fun we enjoy it more and do it more, and get better quicker because it's fun.
Your nature journal is just for you and it should be a space without judgement - of yourself and by others. Drawing in this fun way can make it that. Let's leave the perfect drawings for another time...
Because I'm not saying that we shouldn't ever try to make perfect or very good drawings. If you've seen any of my natural history illustrations, you'll see that I spend a lot of time over these nature drawings and paintings and I aim to make them as accurate and as beautiful as I possibly can. This takes time though...
It's the difference between making a nature sketch and a nature drawing. The sketch is quicker, it's less accurate - if you sketch, you likely do it because it gives you pleasure - and you know that practicing your drawing skills little and often in this way is the key to getting better and not losing the drawing skills you've already acquired. This is the mindset you need for your drawings in your nature journal.
Full nature drawings and paintings take longer - you'll take more care over accuracy, perhaps measuring carefully rather than just looking and drawing and include more detail so that your artwork looks more finished - you might want to put it in a frame and display in on the wall.
There's no hard and fast rule over when a sketch becomes a full drawing - as some sketches can be masterpieces that you'd like to frame and some drawings that you spent a lot of time over and tried really hard over can still look bad and you can feel disappointed with the results.
In truth, the drawings in my nature journal are somewhere between a drawing and a sketch - and actually you don't need to label it as a sketch or a drawing. I just find it helpful to distinguish that in my nature journal, my drawing is there for the process of doing it - for the enjoyment of looking and drawing and finding that connection with nature that makes me feel happier and more relaxed.
It's not there to look good, impress, win awards, or anything else. It's personal drawing, just for me! And I hope that's how you can start to feel about drawing in your nature journal too - it's something personal, for you, to enjoy doing - and you can learn drawing skills as a bonus too...
So when you do want to make that finished drawing, painting or artwork, you've got the drawing skills and the drawing becomes more enjoyable to do and will (hopefully!) look better too!
Nature illustration or natural history illustration can be a sketch or it can be a finished nature drawing. It's more in the concept of what the drawing is intended for. Illustrations can be used in books or other media or as artworks in their own right. The word illustrate means to show or explain visually - so a natural history illustration or nature illustration would try to show the subject clearly...
So your drawings in your nature journal may well be nature illustrations, however quickly you did them, as the intent is to show the subject matter clearly in a visual manner.
My nature illustrations tend to be completed watercolour paintings (over a pencil drawing) - these are quite detailed and do take a good number of hours, often over a few days - so I wouldn't consider doing them in my nature journal - they're 'natural history illustrations' to me, and distinct from the kind of quick, loose drawings I make in my nature journal.
Let's not forget the journaling aspect of nature journaling! I've written about this before, here, but a nature journal implies both a regular practice of nature drawing or sketching (or other kinds of nature journaling that don't involve drawing but are equally valid) and a personal aspect to the recordings of nature which you make.
So I do have a nature sketchbook in addition to my nature journal, but I use it in a different way to my nature journal. In it are the preparatory sketches and drawings and paint try-outs for planned natural history illustrations. I even make notes about the nature I'm sketching and drawing in my nature sketchbook like I do in my nature journal, but my nature sketchbook is not a personal record of that nature I've seen or interacted with in some way over a given week, month, etc - it's not got notes about the weather that day or what else I can hear, smell or see while I'm making my entry. It's not got personal reflections like my nature journal has.
Some people's nature sketchbooks may include things that could make it a nature journal, but they may still see it as their nature sketchbook and not a journal. And, in fact, it's up to each individual to decide for themselves whether they think of their drawing book or note book as a nature journal or a nature sketchbook or something else. There's no nature journal police and you can journal or sketch, draw or paint, in the way that works best for you - and change your mind and how you do things or see things over time, if you want, too.
Hopefully this article will help you to understand the way that I'm using the terms and help you think about how you'd like to define these terms for yourself, too.
If you'd like to understand more about 'what is nature journaling?' take a look at this page next...
If you like the idea of creating your nature journal pages just for you, 'imperfectly' perfectly yours, do check out my 'Imperfect Nature Journaling' short online course with nature journaling prompts and ideas to help you fill your nature journal - take a look here!
Would you like to get started with nature journaling too?
Add your email address below to sign up for my 'Nature Notes with Lotti' newsletter, and I'll send you my free PDF 'Getting Started with your First Nature Journal' guide to help you take your first steps in this fun and absorbing hobby.
I'll also send out regular ideas and nature journal inspiration to help you keep journaling, along with news of my own nature art and illustrations.
My 'Nature Notes with Lotti' newsletter usually comes out around once each month (occasionally more often if there's a special offer on, to ensure you don't miss out).
You can unsubscribe at any time using the 'Unsubscribe' link at the bottom of each email.
Dec 17, 24 05:54 AM
Dec 04, 24 05:06 AM
Nov 29, 24 06:53 AM
Nov 20, 24 06:52 AM
Nov 11, 24 06:05 AM
Explore more recent additions to the site here...
If you'd like to explore nature journaling more, please consider joining me for my 'Imperfect Nature Journaling' online course - I've called it this to remind us to nature journal for the process of connecting with nature to feel good and not to put pressure on ourselves to create pretty pages...
It's a series of 20 lessons or exercises that you can do in your own nature journal to help you try out different ideas and techniques to help you get the most out of your nature journaling sessions and understand what style of nature journaling is the best for you personally.
If this sounds like something you might like, you can find out more about the course here...