Coastlines & Black Sand
Iceland’s coastlines are shaped by weather, waves, volcanic sand, sea stacks, cliffs, and open horizon. These images focus on the meeting point between land and ocean, from black sand beaches and rough Atlantic edges to quieter coastal textures and formations.
Glaciers & Ice
Glaciers, ice caps, glacier tongues, icebergs, and frozen details from across Iceland. This category gathers the colder, more sculptural side of the landscape, where scale, light, movement, and time are constantly visible in the ice.
The Highlands
Remote interior landscapes from Iceland’s highlands, where roads, mountains, rivers, geothermal areas, sand, snow, and lava fields create some of the country’s most unusual terrain. These images focus on wide open spaces, difficult access, and landscapes that feel far from everything.
Lava, Moss & Volcanic Terrain
Volcanic surfaces, moss-covered lava fields, craters, fissures, textures, and strange landforms shaped by eruptions and time. This category is about the raw geological character of Iceland, from soft green moss to sharp black lava and abstract natural patterns.
Roads & Remote Access
Roads, tracks, river crossings, mountain routes, and the sense of movement through isolated places. These images show how access shapes the Icelandic landscape, from paved roads and gravel tracks to highland routes that depend on season, weather, and conditions.
Urban, Industrial & Human-made
Built environments, industrial areas, structures, infrastructure, settlements, harbours, and human marks within the landscape. This category looks at the contrast between Iceland’s natural surroundings and the things people build, use, abandon, or adapt to the weather and terrain.
Waterfalls & Rivers
Waterfalls, glacial rivers, canyons, streams, and moving water across Iceland. This category follows water as one of the main forces shaping the landscape, from powerful falls and braided rivers to smaller details, flow patterns, and changing light around water.