The r/MostBeautiful subreddit was born after the founder and chief moderator challenged himself to find three beautiful things every day. "As part of that effort, he collected images of various stuff he found beautiful. Eventually, he had a large collection of photos and decided to create a subreddit where he can share all of these," one of the moderators managing the r/MostBeautiful online community told Bored Panda about the roots of the group.
They told Bored Panda that the sub has changed "a great deal" over the past nearly-seven years, since 2015. There has been a noticeable shift towards featuring landscapes. "Our content used to be much more eclectic. We featured not just landscapes but a lot of other things—sculptures, paintings, architecture, portraits, beautifully designed objects, or machines, basically anything that we found beautiful. As the sub grew and as our subscribers began actively contributing to it, we found the content to be skewing more towards landscapes."
They added that they still welcome contributions that feature different subjects, too, not just landscapes. So you shouldn't be spooked if you'd like to share something that you personally find to be beautiful.
Since the content shared on r/MostBeautiful of original content and non-original images, you can't expect every single pic to be of the same quality. Not everyone is a professional photographer, after all.
"Inevitably, you will see photos that may not be as beautifully composed as other submissions. We try to curate as best as we can without driving away contributors. It's a tricky thing— balancing the desire to be a welcoming sub to people who want to contribute images that they find beautiful while trying to maintain the quality of the content," the moderator said that the team takes a mixed approach of looking at objective aesthetic value and the subjectivity factor when evaluating the photos shared on r/MostBeautiful.
I was also curious to take a peek into what it's like to take on the role of a moderator. "I have not quantified the amount of time I spend managing this community, to be honest. Some days are easier than others," the mod told me. "In the beginning, it was truly time intensive, but as time went by and you found your groove and learned the ways automoderator can help ease the work, things became smoother and much more manageable."
Dutch photographer Roeselien highlighted the fact that light and lighting are "everything" when it comes to photography. " I’m always checking the weather, wondering if there’s a chance on a beautiful sunrise or sunset. Light can give a photo that magical touch that I’m always looking for," she said that she's always aware of how the weather conditions will impact her work.
Meanwhile, when it comes to composition, the nature photographer listens to her intuition. "I never ever think about rules of thirds or golden ratio. Not that I think these rules aren’t important. Quite the contrary. But I sort of internalized them, so that I don’t have to worry about them anymore," she told Bored Panda. that at a certain point professionals turn conscious decisions into unconscious ones.
I was interested to get into the head of a professional photographer and learn about when they know when to take a photo. "I think this varies greatly from photographer to photographer," Roeselien told me.
"I have colleagues who plan everything down to the last detail and who work fully rationally. Not me, though. I shoot from my heart. Once my head gets involved, it might technically still be a good photo, but usually, these are not the images that make me happy," she said that she likes to rely on intuition and to avoid overthinking.
"Only when thinking stops and I end up in a flow, in which time, the cold and every inconvenience disappears, I take pictures that really move me and given the many positive responses, I have the feeling that these photos also touch others the most."
Meanwhile, photographer Roeselien explained to Bored Panda the role that she thinks post-processing plays in photography. She said that this shouldn't be the main focus of what a photographer does.
"Although post-processing is an important aspect, I usually don’t spend much time on it. If a photo needs more than 5 minutes of editing, it’s probably just not good enough. With a few exceptions," she said.
"I crop, adjust contrasts and lighting. I denoise and sharpen where necessary and I remove (small) disturbing elements. Oh, and I love to play with color, depending on my mood. Sometimes, I pull on the red curve and sometimes I remove some blue cast. I just do as it feels."
#13 Tranquillity Of Nature. The First Snow And A Lonely Tree In Järvenpää, Finland

#15 Tallest Indoor Waterfall Surrounded By Terraced Indoor Forests In Changi Airport, Singapore

The r/MostBeautiful subreddit has been around since April 2015, and in that time, it has amassed nearly 954k members, eager to get their daily dose of aesthetics.
The moderators are very big on transparency and they ask that anyone posting photos credit the content creators and sources. They suggest that members use either Google or TinyEye reverse image search to find the original sources. “If you submit unattributed content or ignore requests for attribution, your future submissions may be filtered,” they warn.
Meanwhile, if you’re posting a photo that you’ve taken yourself, you can include the OC (Original Content) abbreviation either in the title or in the comments.
The moderators ask that redditors don’t submit any low-effort or poor-quality images. The subreddit is about featuring the ‘Most Beautiful’ things, after all. And beauty takes effort.
What’s more, posters are asked to share up to a maximum of 2 submissions per day. “However, please limit submissions to two images within a 24-hour period, whether OC or non-OC,” the moderators hint that quality should come before quantity. And that members should avoid spamming the group and overwhelming the feed.




















