Christopher Fabbro - Landscape Photography

Christopher Fabbro - Landscape Photography Landscape Photography in Upper Austria and beyond. Join me in finding the beauty in the great outdoors!

31/05/2026

Trying something a little different today.

I still prefer sharing photos the old-fashioned way, but it feels like photographers on Instagram have slowly been pushed towards reels whether we like it or not — so I thought I’d give it a try too.

And honestly, if there’s one kind of imagery that fits this slower format, it’s probably woodland photography. Quiet scenes, soft light, small details, and places that don’t need to shout to be beautiful.

So here’s a small collection of forest moments I’ve enjoyed lately 🌿

Over the years I’ve probably photographed more waterfalls than I can count — tiny hidden ones deep in the forest, massiv...
29/05/2026

Over the years I’ve probably photographed more waterfalls than I can count — tiny hidden ones deep in the forest, massive roaring cascades, and plenty somewhere in between.

As relaxing as the final images may look, photographing waterfalls is usually anything but effortless. Wet rocks, slippery slopes, water spray covering the lens every few seconds, and constantly adjusting shutter speeds to find the right balance between movement and texture.

Too fast, and the water loses that flowing feeling. Too slow, and everything turns into a white blur. Sometimes the challenge is what makes it fun though.

Some places make it very difficult to put the camera away, and Banff National Park was definitely one of them.Around alm...
27/05/2026

Some places make it very difficult to put the camera away, and Banff National Park was definitely one of them.

Around almost every corner there seemed to be another lake reflecting the mountains, another trail leading somewhere that didn’t quite feel real. These two photos were taken on different days, but they both carry that same feeling I remember so clearly from the Rockies — fresh air, endless space, and the constant urge to stop and take it all in.

As much as I enjoy travelling and all the grand vistas filling my feed, I always find myself coming back to the kind of ...
25/05/2026

As much as I enjoy travelling and all the grand vistas filling my feed, I always find myself coming back to the kind of photography that made me pick up a camera in the first place: woodlands.

No epic viewpoint, no perfect sunset, no massive sense of scale — just light between the trees, quiet paths, and the feeling of slowing down enough to actually notice what’s around you.

I think that’s why forests never get old to me. They’re never really the same twice 🌿

Back to the quieter corners of Austria 🌿No dramatic mountains this time, no huge landscapes — just a small brook winding...
23/05/2026

Back to the quieter corners of Austria 🌿

No dramatic mountains this time, no huge landscapes — just a small brook winding its way through the forest, hidden beneath the trees and easy to miss if you’re not paying attention.

Places like this, they don’t try to impress you. The more time you spend there, the more they slowly reveal themselves.

These two pictures maybe don’t look much alike, but they still have one important thing in common: they were both taken ...
21/05/2026

These two pictures maybe don’t look much alike, but they still have one important thing in common: they were both taken right by the roadside, after we simply pulled over and stopped for a moment in awe of the view.

I think some of my favourite travel memories happen like that — not the places you plan for months in advance, but the unexpected scenes you almost would have driven past without noticing.

A quick stop turns into twenty minutes, the camera comes out, and suddenly a random stretch of road becomes part of the journey.

Makes me wonder how many beautiful places we miss when we’re too focused on getting somewhere else.

Chasing waterfalls usually sounds a lot more peaceful than it actually is.Slippery rocks, wet shoes, a tripod that never...
19/05/2026

Chasing waterfalls usually sounds a lot more peaceful than it actually is.

Slippery rocks, wet shoes, a tripod that never quite stands straight, and standing in spray for way too long trying different shutter speeds — but somehow it’s always worth it in the end.

I took these two during one of those afternoons where I stopped worrying about the “perfect” composition and just enjoyed being there for a while.

Sometimes photography feels best when you let the scene do its own thing 💧

One of the things I love most about woodland photography is how quickly everything can change.Both of these photos were ...
17/05/2026

One of the things I love most about woodland photography is how quickly everything can change.

Both of these photos were taken in the same forest in Styria, only a short walk apart — yet they feel like completely different worlds. Different light, different mood, different atmosphere.

That’s what keeps me coming back to the woods again and again. You never really know what’s waiting around the next corner. Sometimes all it takes is a few steps for the whole scene to change 🌿

After sharing so many photos from Canada lately, I thought it was time to return to the forests closer to home.These woo...
15/05/2026

After sharing so many photos from Canada lately, I thought it was time to return to the forests closer to home.

These woods in the Salzkammergut may not have the scale of the Rockies, but they feel familiar in a completely different way. Softer light, quieter paths, the kind of places I’ve wandered through for years without ever getting tired of them.

I think that’s what I love most about woodland photography — it doesn’t ask you to chase a grand view. You just slow down, look around, and eventually the forest gives you something back 🌿

Out of all the places I visited in the Canadian Rockies, Waterton Lakes National Park might still be my favourite.Not be...
13/05/2026

Out of all the places I visited in the Canadian Rockies, Waterton Lakes National Park might still be my favourite.

Not because it’s the biggest or most famous, but because it felt different. Quieter. Wilder. Like the mountains, forests, and lakes were all sharing the same space without competing for attention.

These two photos are from an evening there that I still think about often. One of those moments where you realize you don’t really need much beyond fresh air, good light, and a camera in your hands.

I’d go back in a heartbeat 🇨🇦

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