Planning the Perfect Landscape Shot: Location Scouting 101

Every memorable landscape photograph begins long before the shutter clicks. It starts with research, reconnaissance, and a willingness to return to the same spot more than once. Here is how I approach location scouting, and how you can build the same habit into your own work. Start with Research Before driving anywhere, I spend time with maps. Google Earth is indispensable for understanding terrain, elevation changes, and how light will fall across a scene at different times of day.

How Weather Makes or Breaks a Landscape Photo

The most common mistake in landscape photography is waiting for perfect weather. Clear blue skies and calm conditions are pleasant to shoot in, but they rarely produce memorable photographs. The images that stop people, the ones that convey mood, drama, and a sense of place, almost always involve weather that most people would call unpleasant. Why “Bad” Weather Works Weather adds visual complexity. Clouds create structure in the sky. Rain darkens surfaces and saturates colors.