John Frederick Miller (active 1772–1796) was an English illustrator, mainly of botanical subjects.
Miller was the son of the artist Johann Sebastian Müller (1715 – c. 1790).
[3] Between 1776 and 1785 Miller published 60 hand-coloured engravings in his Icones animalium et plantarum or Various subjects of Natural History, wherein are delineated Birds, Animals and many curious Plants, &c. Very few copies of this work survive.
There are seven species of bird for which Miller's plate is the holotype; these include the king penguin, the secretarybird, the crested caracara and the extinct Tahiti crake.
[5] The plates were re-issued in 1796 with text supplied by George Shaw under a new title: Cimelia Physica or Figures of rare and curious quadrupeds, birds, &c. together with several of the most elegant plants.