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Behind the Scenes – How I Find and Plan My Best Landscape Photography LocationsBehind the Scenes – How I Find and Plan My Best Landscape Photography Locations">

Behind the Scenes – How I Find and Plan My Best Landscape Photography Locations

Irina Zhuravleva
par 
Irina Zhuravleva, 
8 minutes de lecture
Blog
décembre 15, 2025

Recommendation: begin with a focused on-site recce at early hours. Mark points where light reveals texture, water motion, or rock juxtaposition; found a few compositions at each spot; log simple notes, build a rough map; this forms secret collection here.

Here a simple workshop links scouting sites; light evaluation; accessibility checks create relationship with approach; wrong assumptions discarded quickly; this keeps momentum lean.

During each visit, test late light shifts; record how terrain reacts to wind; adjust expectations. afternoon shifts reveal unexpected color mood; theres resilience required; even faint color matters; on-site practice builds control toward gusts.

found spots emerge through repeated field tests; think in terms of relationship among aperture, shutter speed, ISO; secret collection here as reference. Could shift toward unexpected weather; coming sessions refine taste; start early to capture low sun; thats a signal to pivot.

Field-Scout Workflow: From Research to Ready-to-Shoot Plans

Recommendation: Build a field-map anchored on five anchors: rivers, rain, foliage, moss, close-up textures; mark light windows; note breeze directions; identify potential scenes. This approach yields a compositional ladder; guides colour balance, sharp details; benefit follows from efficient shoots; there is space for flexibility; only essential gear stays ready.

On-site workflow: Quick reconnaissance using a lightweight kit; record details with a phone memo, a notebook, or a small voice recorder; photograph wide scenes; also shoot close-up textures; observe light direction; watch shadow length; note foliage colour; rain enhances colour; if a greenhouse microclimate exists, log humidity; track warmth.

Techniques include layering green foliage for depth; place moss or bark to frame main subjects; exploit natural colour contrast; keep subjects sharp by using careful focus; choose lenses for close-up details; carry a polariser for glare; a compact tripod stays ready.

Local storytelling matters: talk with people nearby; capture scenes that reflect daily life; link nature with rooms inside cities; there, capture the ambience of spaces that host events or markets.

After the shoot: review images on a bright screen; stay mindful of weather changes; select the five to seven strongest frames; label by subject–natures, foliage, moss, rivers; record weather, light conditions, gear used; compile a one-page recap that links a field experience to the final photo captured; this will improve future trips.

Stage Focus Outputs
Research Recon Identify five anchors; map rivers, foliage, scenes Field-map, list of candidate locations, weather patterns
On-site Capture Light direction; breezes; shot types: wide scenes; close-up textures Shot list, metadata notes, sample frames
Technique Engine Rhythm; sharp edges; colour balance Notes on methods, gear choices, test frames
Local Storytelling People; natures; cities Captions; narrative thread; context shots
Review Archive Selection; tagging; backup Edited selects; keywords; raw storage

Define Your Geographic Focus: Narrow Regions by Season, Terrain, and Access

Start by defining three seasonal foci, anchored in accessible zones; map each region into terrain type; side exposure; travel time; set a target for colours; light; composition.

  1. Seasonal blocks: Summer woodland; plant-covered slopes; wildflowers; colours shifting; wind on leaves; bottom shade; morning light; afternoon light; tripod ready; settings: ISO 100–200; aperture f/8; shutter 1/125–1/250; travel days: 2–3 per block; multiple sessions; there is room for experimentation.
  2. Terrain; access: parking limits; gate hours; permits; design primary site plus backup; part of block; travel time between sites; weather windows; signs of changing conditions; traveling days planned within one trip; lightweight kit for easily mobilized movement.
  3. Practical routine: outdoor settings; pack compact kit; tripod; field log; focus on bottom shots; wide views; close details; log settings; example: 1/200; f/8; ISO 100; new days provide fresh feel; colours; wind; observe signs; directing your eye toward growing textures; providing a cohesive collection; youtube references help inform signs; woodland structure; rainy mood; colours differ by season; side angles matter; afternoon light yields richer colours; collect multiple viewpoints; traveling days plan for smoother returns; hope grows with every trial.

Map My Light: Sun Path, Golden Hour Windows, and Weather Trends

Map My Light: Sun Path, Golden Hour Windows, and Weather Trends

Plot sun path for chosen location using solar chart or apps; there is simple rule: map sun path early; lock golden hour windows across season; monitor weather trends from trusted sources; keep a flexible shooting plan.

On-Site Scouting Ritual: A Practical Checklist for First Impressions

Start at dawn to gauge right light; walk slowly through a wider area; your eye spots composition cues; many candidate frames emerge from river edge, nearby trees, sky breaks; tell yourself which seeks wide results versus close detail; wonder if morning color made this spot moody.

Composition mapping – map lines toward a larger purpose; garden borders, greenery, longwoods, glen shapes; seek contrasts between water, rocks, moss; night temps influence mood; rivers reflections highlight sharp edges; display texture that supports subject without clutter; their presence adds scale to field, being part of surroundings.

Gear plus skills – tripod ensures sharp framing; needs include weather cover; snow transforms reflections; wide lens captures context; outside light at dawn, morning, night; ISO kept low; shutter speeds tuned for motion; carry spare battery in warm pocket; cities nearby offer distant perspectives; tilt camera down to reveal ground textures.

Notes structure – tell your future self why a spot works; taken images cataloged with descriptive names; compose in terms of right lighting, sharp edges, greenery balance; mark nearby features: rivers, a garden border, a glen bend; heading toward a new angle after each check; their being part of environment helps refine next rounds; unexpected weather can shift mood considerably.

Seasonal cadence – seasons shape mood; morning light, night shadows; longwoods offers texture; moody tones emerge from snow covered banks; greenery contrasts with river blues; your notes become a routine that grows with experience; display results after return with a clear narrative; coming back with data builds confidence.

Storyboard with AI: Turning Ideas into Shot Lists and Sequences

Storyboard with AI: Turning Ideas into Shot Lists and Sequences

Use a single AI storyboard to convert a seed idea into shots; a sequence emerges as prompts are refined.

Define a core mood; feed it to a generator that outputs shot blocks by rooms, lighting; scale.

Export a practical checklist: labels for each shot, suggested fstop values, approximate shutter speeds, ISO ceilings.

colours play a key part; specify yellow accents, blue shadows; earthy tones; adds mood.

Apply cropping notes to tighten composition: close-up textures; mid shots; wide sweeps; vary across scenes.

Case studies for glen, switzerland, cities; show how ideas translate into frames.

Influences: philip moss; smith; glen scenes, cities, natures; inspired by years of field testing produce beautiful, various ideas.

If you need direction, consider whether to crop tighter; depending on subject, keep full frame for wider moods.

google references locally; cross-check with rooms, cork boards, yellow notes; comes with practical adjustments.

This workflow yields better ideas; you may reuse layouts across natures, like case by case, years later.

Finally, fully test on site; much time passes during weather shifts; adjust colours, lighting, cropping needs on the fly.

Better ideas emerge when you compare results across regions; case comes with something practical.

Build a Reusable Location Archive: Tag, Rate, and Revisit Strategies

Create a single core archive using a flat spreadsheet or lightweight database, accessible offline. Begin with a handful of proven places: riisitunturi, switzerland, village, meadows, nearby areas; light conditions, colors, subject notes.

Tag each entry with fields: name, location type, orientation, light, weather, season, subject, lenses.

Introduce a dedicated case tag for shifts: cloudy days, changes in color, rain, snow.

Rate each entry 1–5 for light quality, subject versatility, accessibility; keep notes on why score shifted.

Use colorful taglines to highlight areas with strong potential: meadows, overlooks, village edges, nearby vantage points.

Organize periodic reviews: reassign tags after field trips, like hikes; refresh color palettes.

Create revisit prompts: changes in foliage, shifts in cloud cover, after trail improvements, seasonal changes.

Search queries by orientation, light, trips; e.g., riisitunturi sunrise, switzerland alpine meadows, picturesque village margins.

benefit: consistent subject library, faster selection, better post processing; ensures light stays true to mood.

Practical tips: build backups, export CSV, keep offline copy on hike outings.

Orientation notes: north, south, east, west; designate points for sunrise, noon, sunset.

Case study snapshots from riisitunturi trips show colors, light, orientations shift with seasons.

Include a dedicated ‘techniques’ tag capturing approaches: long exposure, stacking, panorama; note which lenses fit landscaped, outdoor scenes.