About Nat Doig

A selfie style portrait of a white middle aged woman with blonde bobbed hair that is flicking outwards. She has brown eyes, freckles and burnt orange coloured lipstick. She has a small stud in her nose. Around her neck is a black cord necklace. Her top is brown with large pink and green flowers on it. The background is cream coloured.
Nat Doig

Has camera will photograph

I started taking photographs as a way to better see the world around me, and to share why my visual impairment doesn’t mean I see less rather I just see differently.


2022

Four of my photographs feature in the Layers of Vision exhibition being held at Bush House, Kings College London. You can find out more on this news page.

2021

My trusty Nikon D7200 stops working on a trip to Brighton, one too many knocks and bumps. I invest in a new mirrorless Nikon Z50. I am still getting used to the new camera a year on.

2013

I start taking photographs at work, mainly at bus campaign events and my pictures are featured in RNIB’s Bus Charter.

2008

My husband Jase, gives me his point and shoot Casio camera to take on holiday to Cornwall. I absolutely love it, using my laptop to zoom in on the pictures I have taken to really see the subject. It’s not an understatement to say it changed my life.

About my visual impairment

I was born with cataracts which caused blindness. So I am unusual for someone with a visual impairment in that I gained sight rather than lost it. As a baby I had a series of operations which removed the cataracts but also removed the lenses in both my eyes. I was also left with a number of other eye conditions which relate to visual impairment such as nystagmus. Not having lenses in my eyes means that my eyes are unable to focus or change focus.

I am often asked “what can you see?” This always strikes me as an odd thing to ask a visually impaired person. But as it is relevant to my photography I will try to explain about it here. I see the world around me a little like an impressionist painting. With out the ability to focus I don’t see the level of detail most others see. The world I see is soft, blurry, and beautiful. I see colours vividly, and I see light differently to others, not having lenses in my eyes means that UV light isn’t filtered and I can see low levels of UV that other people can’t. It’s my super power, though I haven’t found a way to save the world with it yet!

A landscape image of purple clematis flowers growing against a white wall which is slightly blurred in the background. The flowers are on thin stems with green leaves. The purple flowers are at different angles and facing in different directions as if they are rambling about. The image makes me happy.
Rambling Clematis in John Clares Garden in Helpston

When I’m not taking photographs

I’ve done a lot of different things in my life. I was a teacher of English and Drama, I’ve worked in a jobcentre, and in a laundry at a nursing home. I’ve spent over 20 years championing disability rights especially in the areas of accessible transport and employment.

I’m a bit of an equality law geek, having co-ordinated the drafting of codes of practise for the Disability Discrimination Act and drafted examples for guidance that sits along side the Equality Act.

For the last 12 years I’ve run my own business providing advice, training and support to various organisations and employers . If you want to see more about what I’ve done in the disability rights filed please visit www.hareonna.com

When I’m not working I write a bit, a read a lot, I play computer games, eat cake, drink coffee, go for walks in the countryside and look after my cat’s every whim and fancy. Look how pleased she is with herself.

A close up of the head and shoulders of a grey tabby cat. She has a white chin, brown nose, white whiskers and large green eyes that are looking into the camera. Her fur is very plush. She is lying on a striped duvet on a bed.
Kasumi cat: The Wee Tubby Tabby