Making a living as a pro photographer is no easy task. Some times you can be lead to dangerous and unexpected places, beyond your wildest dreams. Simon Watkinson shares his story
Val D’Orcia, Tuscany, Italy
Although this area is known mainly for a couple of well-known photographic places, the valley d’Orcia offers much more. Welcome to Tuscany, kingdom of easygoing life and telephoto lenses.
Sri Lanka
Arduous road travel, heat and humidity, malaria, unsanitary conditions associated routinely with the third world and yet, Sri Lanka is one of those destinations a landscape photographer should visit, as Mike Long tells us
Ilfracombe Standing Stones
Article on tracing the location of Ilfracombe standing stones in North Devon, England and their photographic potential.
Lake Baikal, Siberia
The oldest, the deepest and the most impressive. All these characteristics apply to the famous Siberian Lake Baikal, which its residents call a freshwater sea.
Antarctica
The remoteness of Antarctica makes getting there a challenge. However, as Michael Leggero explains, this is an amazing continent and one of the only places on this planet where nature truly feels untouched.
Oldshoremore And Polin Beach, Scotland
Location article with landscape pictures of Oldshoremore beach and Polin beach on the north west coast of Scotland by Willem Van Leuveren.
“Stub” Stewart State Park, NW Oregon
Landscape photography location guide on “Stub” Stewart State Park in North/West Oregon in the USA by Jack Graham.
Horsetail Falls On El Capitan
This is the most stunning photography of Horsetail falls on El Capitan in February when the water looks like gold during sunset.
Finchale Priory
There are some remains of the early 12th century stone chapel of St John the Baptist, the site of Godric of Finchale’s burial…












