You Don't Need a Dramatic Location to Shoot Compelling Landscape Photos

Shooting intimate water scenes in landscape photography is one of the most overlooked ways to build a compelling portfolio. You don't need dramatic mountain vistas or sweeping coastlines to create striking images.

Coming to you from William Patino, this practical video focuses on finding and photographing small-scale water scenes in everyday locations. Patino walks through his full process at a local river, from choosing the right lens to reading the water itself. He recommends a telephoto lens for this kind of work, and he's shooting with a Canon RF 100-400mm f/5.6-8 IS USM, though he notes a 70-200mm or even a 24-105mm can work. The extra reach lets you isolate small pockets of moving water that would otherwise blend into the broader scene. Patino also prefers shooting from slightly above the water rather than at ground level, which keeps more of the frame in focus and avoids the blurred foreground compression that a telephoto at close range tends to produce.

One of the more useful things Patino covers is shutter speed experimentation. He's shooting across a wide range, from 1/20 of a second down to a full second, and he points out that the right speed depends on your focal length, how close you are to the water, and how fast the water is actually moving. There's no single answer. He also shoots a large number of frames in a single session because the water changes constantly and each frame looks different. What he's hunting for is a sense of flow and direction in the image, not just a static pattern of rocks and foam. Lighting plays into this too. He picks days with intermittent cloud cover for soft, diffused light, and he suggests golden hour if you're near a beach or lake, where the color contrast becomes more dramatic.

The post-processing side of this work is simpler than you might expect, partly because you're dealing with a narrow color palette and a relatively controlled tonal range. Patino's approach leans on selective dodging and burning to suggest where light is entering the frame, which gives the eye somewhere to land. Since you're shooting with a long lens, the frame doesn't always make the light source obvious, so adding that directionality in post helps the image feel intentional rather than flat. He also avoids leaning too hard into flat midtones, keeping some small highlights in the image so it retains contrast and life. There's more in the video about his specific color grading approach and how he handles different lighting conditions, including the golden hour processing he briefly mentions. Check out the video above for the full rundown from Patino.

Alex Cooke is a Cleveland-based photographer and meteorologist. He teaches music and enjoys time with horses and his rescue dogs.

Related Articles

1 Comment

Great water info! But for me I just keep looking around as I drive on a walkabout in any area I find myself. A great place to find great spots near by or even on a trip is using google or other that have photos of places in your area at locations you can check out. Like roadside views where people post their captures, most are just snaps with a cell phone but you can find some great place.
Sometime going somewhere I am held up by so many stops or just planning on a place just waiting for the right light.
I find myself eating before a sunset or getting up and heading to spot for a sunrise and eating after. Ever stay in a hotel high up and have a great view but the room has to be dark and a folding device "Lens Skirt" get the large or extra large also good on a airplane, train or bus travel/tour.
If one could afford it a Humvee with a turret on top and a driver in some out of the way drives, just viewing Google street views and the trail views they have now.
Also for great sunrises/sets ask the local police who patrol mornings or evenings where their favorite views are and even where the most accidents happen during sunrise and sets some are great in mountain drives.
Like if you do it right you will get nowhere fast.
I was around before super highways and always wondered about the views the builders had everyday sitting out in nowhere having a meal on a stump! There are still places!