This photograph means far more to me than simply capturing a beautiful landscape.
It reflects exactly what matters most to me in photography: creating distinctive, uncommon images that come as close as possible to the vision I already carry within me.
Before leaving for a two week photography trip to the Lofoten Islands, I spent months preparing. Many of the images I wanted to create had already existed in my mind long before I arrived. My goal was not to leave them to chance, but to realize them on location as faithfully as possible.
This scene in Henningsvær was never meant to become a bright summer image or a classic sunset photograph. What I was looking for instead was a darker, quieter and deeply atmospheric interpretation shaped by mist, cold, depth and that unmistakable northern heaviness that cannot be forced, only awaited.
That is exactly where the challenge lies. During these months, conditions can be extremely demanding. Wind speeds often reach up to 90 km/h. On top of that, there is rain, fog that is too dense, clouds sitting too high, or mountains disappearing completely behind the weather. Finding the narrow window in which all of these elements come together in just the right way is incredibly difficult. It requires experience, patience, endurance and a good deal of frustration tolerance.
Flying a drone under such conditions means working close to the limit. You can try for days, observe for hours, wait, adjust and decide again and again, and still there is no guarantee that light, mist, wind and visibility will align in that one brief moment exactly as you had imagined it.
To capture the scale, weight and drama of this place the way I experienced it, this image consists of a 3x3 panorama built from nine individual frames. A single photograph could never have conveyed this sense of space with the same intensity.
If this image manages to convey even a small part of that atmosphere, then all of it was already worth it.