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Juliet Klottrup captures the beauty of Yorkshire’s peat bogs and the people restoring them

The filmmaker and photographer outlines the importance of bringing human stories to the forefront of environmental conservation.

Date
27 January 2026

The Yorkshire Peat Partnership is an environmental organisation that’s been restoring North Yorkshire’s Peatlands for over 15 years. Award winning photographer and filmmaker Juliet Klottrup’s participation in this ongoing conservation project began somewhere in the summer of 2023 when she set out to highlight the importance of community participation in the restoration of Deton Moor through a series of soft but striking images of the local landscape and it’s people.

The two year long photo documentary series isn’t the photographers first exploration of the ecological potential of moss, in fact, in many ways this project builds on Juliet’s former documentary Moss of Many Layers: another art-science community and research project led by the University of Cumbria in partnership with scientists from the Centre for National Parks and Protected Areas.

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Juliet Klottrup: Restoration of Denton Moor, Yorkshire (Copyright Ⓒ Juliet Klottrup, 2025)

Now somewhat familiar with spending a great deal of time in these “large, open landscapes”, Juliet’s shares, she has spent more than a number of years “decoding them beyond data and through art”, working alongside local communities, conservationists and ecologists to portray the positive environmental impact of restoration, capturing images that can only come from forming a deep connection to people and place.

“Time is always important when learning about a new landscape,” the photographer shares, “in order to pay close attention you need lots of it.” Each visit to the moor revealed something new for the photographer; her creative process growing and changing throughout this collaboration with local residents and environmental experts. Paying close attention to methods others were using to engage with the landscape – from walkover bird surveys to ground-truthing and even drawing as a form of data collection – Juliet let these approaches refocus how she looked at the moors at different scales. New forms of observation for her tool belt, these techniques “offered an expansive way of understanding the land” as an image maker.

The resulting collection of photographs – decisively caught on the slowness of analogue film – are “an expression of the landscape where data stops and colour, interpretation and understanding begins”, Juliet shares. With a focus on capturing portraits of the people behind the project, “it always felt important to bring the human story to the forefront to show how closely people are connected to the land,” she says. The set of studies of the natural landscape and its visitors capture an array of characters that have put their boots on to explore, understand and respond to the moorland.

As this conservation work at the Peat continues, the lands ecological value is better understood, and the photographer perceives this long-term documentary series as the creation of “a living recording” of the place, one that offers others a human-centred understanding of its impact on the local community. “It’s only when people understand something that they come to care about it and want to see it restored or protected,” Juliet ends.

GalleryJuliet Klottrup: Restoration of Denton Moor, Yorkshire (Copyright Ⓒ Juliet Klottrup, 2025)

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Juliet Klottrup: Restoration of Denton Moor, Yorkshire (Copyright Ⓒ Juliet Klottrup, 2025)

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About the Author

Ellis Tree

Ellis Tree (she/her) is a staff writer at It’s Nice That and a visual researcher on Insights. She joined as a junior writer in April 2024 after graduating from Kingston School of Art with a degree in Graphic Design. Across her research, writing and visual work she has a particular interest in printmaking, self-publishing and expanded approaches to photography.

ert@itsnicethat.com

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