All Programs
4 available
Beginner
Landscape Photography Foundations
A structured course covering the core technical and compositional skills you need to photograph outdoor scenes with confidence and consistency.
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Intermediate
Long Exposure Landscape Photography
Learn to shoot silky waterfalls, streaking clouds, and glassy water surfaces using long exposure techniques in real outdoor conditions.
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Editing
Landscape Photo Editing in Lightroom
A focused editing course built around landscape-specific challenges: recovering blown skies, managing colour casts, and creating a consistent look across a series.
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Advanced
Advanced Landscape Photography Workshop
An intensive workshop for photographers who already know the basics and want to work on creative vision, portfolio development, and shooting in demanding conditions.
View ProgramWhat separates a good shot from a forgettable one
Most landscape photography instruction focuses on gear lists and golden-hour reminders. These programs go further — into the decisions made before the shutter opens: reading terrain, choosing focal length for emotional distance, and knowing when to wait.
Each program is led by a practitioner who has shot in conditions that don't cooperate, not a studio environment that does. Expect specific techniques, not general encouragement.
About OptionpathHow the format is structured
Each program follows the same underlying logic: show the decision, not just the result. Instructors walk through real field scenarios — why they chose a particular ridge at a particular time of day, what they discarded, and what made a composition work on the second attempt rather than the first.
The step-by-step format isn't about making things simple. It's about making the reasoning visible, so you can apply it to locations and conditions the instructor has never seen.
- 1 Field technique demonstrated in actual outdoor conditions, not reconstructed in post
- 2 Technical settings explained in context — aperture, shutter, and light decisions tied to the specific scene
- 3 Post-processing shown as part of the workflow, not a separate cosmetic step