Minimalist long exposure of the Pin Mill boat graveyard on a misty morning ‚iLoX Fine Art Landscape Photography, Mid Devon

Where stillness meets the sea.

Fine Art Landscape Photography  ·  Mid Devon

There are places that demand more than a glance. A decaying pier stretching into silk-smooth water. A boat graveyard wrapped in morning mist. Sea defences standing their ground against a tide that no longer cares. These are the moments that drive me out before dawn ‚waiting for the light, the mood, and the conditions to align. This is fine art landscape photography rooted in patience, precision, and a genuine love for the places I photograph.

If you've ever walked into a room and been stopped in your tracks by a single photograph ‚the kind that pulls you in and holds you there ‚you'll understand what fine art landscape photography can do to a wall.

These images are available as premium fine art prints, produced to exacting standards using archival-quality materials built to last generations. Whether you're drawn to the moody black and white tones of the Happisburgh sea defences, the dreamlike calm of a misty coastal morning, or the graphic simplicity of the Maldon beach huts, there is something in this collection for the discerning buyer.

Every print is shot on full-frame Canon professional equipment, post-processed with an obsessive eye for detail, and available in a range of sizes to suit both statement walls and intimate spaces. Each one comes with a certificate of authenticity. These are not mass-produced poster prints ‚they are individually considered works, made by a photographer who cares deeply about what ends up on your wall.

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I came to landscape photography after a long career in portraiture, wedding, and studio photography ‚including running a successful studio specialising in family and boudoir work. That background shaped how I see light, how I think about composition, and how much I care about the quality of a final image. Landscape photography looks solitary and simple from the outside. It isn't.

Almost everything in this gallery was captured using long exposure techniques ‚typically with a 10-stop or greater ND filter, sometimes stacked, often in challenging conditions. The goal is to use time as a creative tool. Moving water becomes glass. Clouds become streaks. Mist softens and wraps. What the eye sees as chaos, a long exposure renders as calm.

The discipline of minimalism is not about empty frames ‚it's about removing everything that distracts from the story. The Happisburgh sea defence series is a good example: weathered timber posts, receding perspective, and reflections in wet sand. Nothing more. That restraint is deliberate and hard-won.

I work full time outside of photography, which means my time in the field is precious. Every shoot is researched ‚tide times, golden hour calculators, weather forecasts, and satellite maps consulted days in advance. When I arrive at a location I don't want to be guessing. I want to be shooting. That preparation discipline produces better photography.

If you're starting out in long exposure seascape photography, the biggest upgrade you can make is not a new camera. It's a quality tripod, a quality filter system, and the patience to wait for the right conditions. The camera already sees more than enough.

Kit used across this collection
  • Canon full-frame professional system
  • Wide-angle and standard zoom lenses
  • Heavy-duty carbon fibre tripod
  • 10-stop ND filters ‚stacked where needed
  • Remote shutter release ‚always
Canon professional
Long exposure
ND filtration
Archival prints
Mid Devon based