Description
The Lofoten Islands lie 200 kilometres north of the Arctic Circle in northern Norway, and the traditional fishing villages of Reine, Hamnøy, and Sakrisøy — with their characteristic red-painted rorbu cabins built on stilts over the fjord — have become among the most photographed landscape subjects in Scandinavia. Winter conditions transform the location: the mountains carry full snow coverage, the sun never rises above 6 degrees above the horizon even at midday, and the low-angled light produces a quality of softness and warmth that the summer midnight sun cannot replicate. This photograph was made at the apex of the brief midday light window — approximately 30 minutes of usable directional light — in conditions of perfect fjord stillness that created a mirror-quality reflection of the red cabins and snow mountains.
