Bring nature home

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protect ecosystems

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Bring nature home 🌍 protect ecosystems 🌍

Prints that protect.

YOUR DECOR CAN DO MORE

Beautiful prints that protect wild spaces

A woman with blonde wavy hair, wearing an orange off-the-shoulder top and ripped black jeans, is holding a colorful piece of art featuring a close-up of a butterfly on a flower.

Every print funds habitat protection and helps keep wild places alive, because protecting the planet starts with noticing it.

Shop the Drop

Fill Your Walls With Nature

Let Mother Nature fill your walls as a daily reminder that what restores you, restores the Earth.

Poise
from $315.00
Harmony
from $315.00
Lumen
from $335.00

Prints with purpose

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the wild land project

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Prints with purpose 🌍 the wild land project 🌍

About the Initiative

What we protect begins with what we notice.

Prints With Purpose is how I turn moments of connection with nature into meaningful action. Every print is created from time spent slowing down, paying attention, and remembering what matters.

Each purchase directly supports The Wild Land Project - a fund dedicated to buying land simply to keep it wild - by donating 50% of net profits from each print purchase.

Prints with Purpose

This is where art becomes impact.

A pink plumeria with water droplets on its petals, set against green leaves, some with visible veins.

Turning art into activism

ABOUT THE WILD LAND PROJECT

A circular logo with a woman in a green dress sitting on a large green leaf, surrounded by text that reads 'ECO SWAN' at the top and 'Earth Led Photography' at the bottom, all on a dark green background.

Through The Wild Land Project every print becomes a step toward protecting land, preserving habitats, and keeping wild places alive.

This initiative exists to do something tangible: protect real ecosystems by securing land that is at risk of being developed. The jungle aimed at being protected is currently being ravaged by those who see it as a place for profit.

I view the jungle as a safe space for many creatures. A home of wild biodiversity that is sadly being destroyed.

The Wild Land Project is still in its early chapters, but the intention is clear. This is about speaking up for the land, the forest and creatures that cannot speak for themselves. It’s protecting what must be saved before it’s gone for good. It’s direct, grounded action for the natural world.

To learn more about how this project began and where it’s headed, visit the Wild Land Project blog.

(This section answers the big question people are asking: “But what is the Wild Land Project, actually?”)

Hey, I’m Sam

Curious by nature, creatively driven, and deeply connected to Mother Earth.

Admiration for the natural world and its intricate details has always been a part of who I am. I spent many years living in mountain valleys admiring the jagged edges of the rock faces and imagining the days that glaciers formed the land. The landscapes around me changed drastically when I moved to coastal Belize. I found myself on the edge of the sea, surrounded by lush jungle.

Photography helped me slow down enough to notice things I had rushed before. When you don’t observe the small details, the world can move right past you. But when you start paying attention, you begin to see where life is dancing on the breeze. Bees gathering pollen to feed their family, the soft whisper of wind through settling leaves.

I’ve become so much more grounded and present than ever.

Photography has walked beside me as I’ve learned how to practice noticing.

Through Eco-Sam, I document the alive beauty of the natural world and create art that brings people back to it in everyday spaces. My mission is simple: caring doesn’t have to be complicated. It simply happens when we start paying attention.

Woman holding camera in front of tropical plants, smiling at camera
A woman with tattoos on her left arm, wearing a pink sleeveless top, is holding a camera and taking a photo of pink flowers on a bush. She has long wavy blonde hair and is outdoors surrounded by lush greenery.

My approach is simple.

For a long time, I thought caring deeply was something you did quietly. From a distance., as an admirer.

I didn’t think I was meant to take up space in the conversation. I watched, I notice d, I felt it all, I stayed small.

But being this close to the land has changed me.

Over the past year, I’ve watched giant patches of the jungle near my home thin out and disappear. Trees cleared. Habitats erased. Places that once felt alive suddenly quiet. It’s impossible to unsee once you’ve slowed down enough to notice.

I thought about the birds that return to the same trees each season. The foxes tucked away beneath roots. The countless small lives woven into those spaces long before anyone thought to mark them for sale.

This is how a different question began to form.

What if, instead of only admiring the land, I chose to protect it?
What would caring look like as action?

That question became The Wild Land Project. A long-term commitment to buying land simply to keep it wild. To leave it as it is. To protect the places that give so much, without asking them to become anything else.

This is how my work comes full circle. I slow down. I notice. I turn those moments into art. And the art helps protect the land that inspired it.

Caring, for me, isn’t loud or complicated.
It’s paying attention and choosing how to respond.

Conscious art for a living planet.