Home 🏔️ Landscape & Cityscape 🌌 Astrophotography 🚁 Drone & Aerial 🇮🇸 Iceland Guide 🇬🇧 London Guide Portfolio Learn Gear Work With Me
← Back to Home
🇮🇸

Iceland — Where Fire, Ice
& Light Collide

A photographer's honest field guide to shooting Iceland's south coast — from the roaring waterfalls of the Golden Circle to the glacial diamonds washing ashore at Jökulsárlón. No fluff, no filler. Just what you need to come home with frames worth printing large.

🏔️ Landscape 🌌 Astro 🚁 Aerial 💧 Long Exposure

A landscape that doesn't play fair

Iceland isn't just a photography destination — it's a full sensory overload. In a single afternoon you can stand behind a curtain of falling water, walk across black volcanic sand where glacial ice glitters like scattered jewels, and watch the sky ignite in gold during a two-hour golden hour that seems to refuse to end.

The south coast alone — from Reykjavík east to Höfn — packs more iconic locations per kilometre than almost anywhere else on the planet. Route 1 is essentially one long gallery wall, and you'll find yourself pulling over constantly. The hard part isn't finding something to photograph. It's choosing when to stop.

2h
Golden hour length in autumn
Nov–Mar
Ice cave season & long dark nights
~5h
Daylight in deep winter
KEF
Keflavík Airport — entry point

The frames you'll chase

💧
01
Seljalandsfoss

A 60-metre cascade you can walk behind — that path opens up compositions that feel entirely private, even when the car park is packed. Bring a rain cover for your lens. You will get wet. At sunset the spray catches the light and turns the mist golden.

Long ExposureWide Angle14mm GM
📸 WSP tip: Shoot from inside the cavern at blue hour — the waterfall frames against a darkening sky and the exposure contrast is dramatic.
🌊
02
Skógafoss

25 metres wide, 60 metres tall, and loud enough to drown your thoughts. When the sun rises in the east, rainbows form in the mist almost daily. Climb the 500 steps to the right of the falls for a completely different perspective — the river valley stretching inland.

Rainbow LightLong ExposureTelephoto
📸 WSP tip: Arrive at first light before the tour buses. The base of the falls is empty for maybe 45 minutes at sunrise — use every second of it.
🖤
03
Reynisfjara Black Sand Beach

Volcanic black sand, towering basalt columns, and the jagged Reynisdrangar sea stacks rising from a wild North Atlantic. The waves here are genuinely dangerous — sneaker waves arrive with zero warning. That said, the compositions available here are extraordinary in almost any light or weather.

SeascapeLong ExposureWide Angle
📸 WSP tip: A 6–10 stop ND filter at 20–30 seconds turns the chaotic surf into silky smoke against the black sand. Pair with the basalt columns as your anchor.
🏔️
04
Fjaðrárgljúfur Canyon

A winding, two-kilometre canyon carved by glacial meltwater. The canyon walls drop sharply, and the river below winds in sweeping S-curves that are tailor-made for aerial photography. Check drone regulations before flying — access rules change seasonally.

AerialTelephotoMorning Light
📸 WSP tip: Best aerial light is early morning when mist sits in the canyon floor — the Mavic 3 Pro's tele lens at 166mm equivalent compresses the canyon curves beautifully.
🧊
05
Jökulsárlón Glacier Lagoon

Luminous blue icebergs calving from the Breiðamerkurjökull glacier and drifting slowly toward the sea — a scene so surreal it looks composited even when you're standing in front of it. Capture it at blue hour when the icebergs glow from within and the sky reflects on still water.

ReflectionBlue HourAstro
📸 WSP tip: The lagoon makes a stunning foreground for star trail photography in winter. Set up on the bank and let the icebergs anchor a 60-minute star trail stack.
💎
06
Diamond Beach

Right next to the lagoon, glacial ice washes ashore onto jet-black volcanic sand. The ice chunks are translucent, some the size of a car, others small enough to hold. They shift with every tide so no two visits are the same. Sunrise here is one of those moments that redefines what a photograph can be.

SunriseWide Angle14mm GM
📸 WSP tip: Get low — ground level with the 14mm GM transforms the ice chunks into mountains. Check both sides of the channel; ice distribution shifts with the tide.
⛰️
07
Vestrahorn / Stokksnes

Jagged twin peaks nicknamed "Batman Mountain" rising from black sand dunes, tidal flats that mirror the sky on calm days, and a wild coastal foreground. Pay the entry fee at the Viking Café. Spend at least half a day here. Drones are permitted. The golden hour light raking across those peaks is the reason you flew across the ocean.

AerialReflectionGolden Hour
📸 WSP tip: After a receding tide, the shallow flats become a mirror. Set up wide with the mountain filling the frame and shoot during the last 20 minutes of golden hour.
🫧
08
Svartifoss — Black Falls

Inside Skaftafell in Vatnajökull National Park — dark hexagonal basalt columns frame a curtain of water like a natural cathedral. A 30-minute uphill walk from the visitor centre. The geometry of those columns is extraordinary and unlike anything on the south coast.

ArchitectureWide AngleLong Exposure
📸 WSP tip: Overcast days are better here — diffused light makes the dark basalt columns pop without harsh shadows breaking up the geometry.

What to pack specifically

BODY
Sony A7RV — Weather Sealed
Iceland's weather changes without warning. Wind, rain, and sea spray are constant companions. The A7RV handles this beautifully — but always have a rain sleeve ready near waterfalls and the ocean.
LENSES
14mm GM + 70-200mm G
The 14mm GM for waterfalls, ice and wide landscapes. The 70-200mm G for compressed canyon and mountain shots. These two lenses cover 95% of Iceland's photographic demands.
DRONE
Mavic 3 Pro — Check Regulations
Drone rules vary significantly by location in Iceland. Fjaðrárgljúfur and Vestrahorn are popular aerial spots — always check current regulations and wind before launching.

Let's plan a shoot together

Always happy to talk locations, timing, and gear with a fellow photographer. Reach out anytime.

Get in Touch →