Essential Landscape Photography Skills Volume III

Essential Landscape Photography Skills Volume III

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Building on the foundational knowledge you gained in Essential Landscape Photography Skills, Volume 1, and the more advanced techniques and broader insights explored in Volume 2, I’m excited to bring you the final part of this photographic journey.

Having continued to explore countless dramatic coastlines, remote areas, and ever-changing landscapes, I’ve kept building on the same core idea that has run through all three volumes — that most landscape photography challenges don’t come from a lack of information, but from what happens in the field in the moments after you arrive at a location.

Before the tripod is set up.
Before the composition is fully formed.
Before the first frame is taken.

That is where consistency is built… or lost.

To get Essential Landscape Photography Skills, Volume 3 for free, simply join my newsletter, and you will receive your download code to bring the cost of the book down to zero.

If you find value in this work and would like to support it, you can also choose to purchase the book for €4.99 as a “high five” contribution. It is completely optional, but it really helps support the time and effort that goes into creating these books and videos.

Download your copy today and complete the full trilogy.

Three volumes. Thirty chapters. One complete learning path — from foundations, through technical understanding, and into consistency in the field.

Continue shooting with greater clarity, more deliberate decisions, and a more consistent approach to your photography.

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Volume 3 brings everything together.

This book is designed for photographers who already understand the basics but want to become more consistent in the field. Whether you’ve been shooting for years or are still refining your approach, the focus here is the same — making better decisions when it actually matters, not just in theory.

Rather than introducing entirely new ideas, this final volume focuses on refinement and consistency in the field. It takes everything covered in the previous two books and looks at how it actually applies when you are standing in front of a scene, with changing light, limited time, and decisions that need to be made quickly.

We’ll look closely at how to build a more efficient and repeatable workflow in the field, how to improve your ability to get things right in camera under pressure, and how to approach sharpness, focus, and execution in a more deliberate way.

A key focus of this volume is understanding hit rate — not as a technical measurement, but as a reflection of how you make decisions in real time. We’ll also explore how simplifying your approach in the field often leads to more consistent results, and how unnecessary complexity can quietly reduce clarity when it matters most.

Alongside this, we revisit mindset and approach in a practical way, looking at how comparison, expectation, and overthinking can influence the way you shoot without you even realising it.

You don’t need to have mastered every technical setting to get value from this. If you’ve ever stood in front of a scene and felt unsure about what to do next, this volume is designed to help simplify that moment and give you a clearer way of working.

As with Volumes 1 and 2, this book is supported by my wider YouTube series, which now includes around 30 dedicated videos covering the full trilogy. Each chapter also has its own accompanying video, breaking down the concepts in real shooting environments so you can see exactly how they apply in the field.

The goal has always been to connect written structure with real-world application, allowing you to learn in a way that suits you best — whether that’s reading, watching, or combining both.

Just like its predecessors, this book is more than just text; it’s a structured learning experience built around real-world photography. It is designed to be practical, actionable, and relevant to the conditions you actually face when shooting landscapes.

At this point, the goal isn’t to add more information. It’s to bring everything together into a more consistent way of working — so when you are out in the field, decisions become more natural, and results become more repeatable.

If you take nothing else from this series, the simplest idea is this — better photographs rarely come from knowing more, but from seeing and deciding more clearly in the moments that matter.