50 Amazing Pics Of Our World You Probably Haven’t Seen Before
There’s so much beauty in the world, but it’s easy to overlook when life moves fast. Between busy schedules, constant scrolling, and endless to-do lists, we rarely slow down long enough to truly notice it.
Thankfully, many talented people do. They capture those fleeting moments in stunning photos and share them on subreddits like r/pic and r/photographs. We’ve gathered some of the most gorgeous ones below—scroll down to enjoy them and upvote your favorites.
This post may include affiliate links.
Switzerland
A Winter Night In Prague
These photos are mesmerizing. You look at them and immediately feel inspired to grab your camera or your phone and start snapping away. But somehow, what you see in front of you doesn’t always look the same once it’s on the screen.
The light feels off, the colors are flat, and that magic you wanted to capture is just… missing. So how do you get as good as the people who make it look effortless?
Devil's Bridge, Germany
Japan Kyoto Inari Gate
As Adobe explains, “everyone has different ideas about what makes a great photo.” For some, it’s about beauty. For others, it’s about surprise or emotion.
But the point is simple: if your image communicates what you wanted it to say, it’s a good photo. Getting there, however, takes a mix of technical understanding and creative instinct.
A River Valley In Iceland
Neuschwanstein Castle From Above
One of the most important things to grasp early on is exposure or, in other words, how your camera handles light. Shutter speed, aperture, and ISO all work together to create balance. Change one, and the others need to adjust.
A photo that’s too bright or too dark distracts from the emotion you’re trying to show. But when you find that balance, you unlock endless possibilities: a slower shutter speed can blur motion beautifully, while a wide aperture can isolate your subject in dreamy focus.
Canterbury, England
The First Signs Of Winter In The Canadian Rockies
Maple Trees Along A Ridge, Japan
Of course, to get that kind of control, you have to know your equipment. “The more you know about a camera, the more you can take advantage of it and change things on the fly,” says photographer Jeff Carlson in Adobe’s guide.
It doesn’t mean you need an expensive setup. “Even if you just have an iPhone, you can still get creative with that,” adds photographer Sarah Marcella. The best camera, after all, is the one you have with you, and knowing how to use it well makes all the difference.
Lightning Bolts Striking Beirut, Lebanon
Riders on the Storm (wramb wrambwramb wramb). Does anyone see a lightning horse in the foreground on the right?
Edinburgh Castle
An Ornate Red Sandstone Staircase
And then comes the part every professional swears by: practice. “My number one piece of advice is to practise. I learn something new every time I shoot. Every environment and every photoshoot is unique,” says photographer Jenn Byrne.
Every photo won’t be perfect, even the pros take bad ones. But as Carlson reminds us, “Shoot a lot of photos and recognize that you’re going to make a lot of really bad photos and that’s okay.” Trial and error is how you find your eye and develop your own style.
Blue Aurora Over Norway
Aurora was visible where I live (Lehi, Utah) a few nights ago, but only through a phone lens.
Stormy Sea
Three Point Bridge Built In 1638, Comacchio, Italy
Light, however, remains the true heart of photography. As Adobe notes, good light is crucial. It sets the mood, defines your subject, and can completely change the way a shot feels.
If you’re shooting outdoors, the golden hour (the hour after sunrise or before sunset) will give you the softest, most flattering tones. Harsh midday light, on the other hand, tends to wash everything out.
Professionals often plan their entire day around the right light because they know that sometimes, nature is the best filter.
Scotland, Isle Of Skye
Dog In A Boat
The Infamous Wanaka Tree Under A Winter Sky
It's a willow growing out of Lake Wānaka on the South Island of New Zealand. It's absolutely beautiful down there.
Composition also plays a huge role in making an image stand out. Adobe’s experts suggest using the rule of thirds as a starting point: placing your subject off-center instead of right in the middle makes your photo instantly more dynamic.
Once that becomes second nature, experiment with angles, balance, and leading lines. A slightly lower perspective, a change in symmetry, or even just taking a few steps to the side can completely shift the mood of a picture.
Turquoise Wave
Camping On The Water
The Vikings Have Landed!
That last part—taking a few steps—might sound simple, but it’s something photographers swear by. “Don’t be afraid to use your legs as the zoom,” photographer Lee told The Guardian.
Sometimes getting closer (or lower, or higher) can change your framing entirely. “You’ll notice most photographers when they work are crouching or bending in strange ways. I’m always surprised if I see a picture of myself working, because I’ve often got my bum up in the air,” Lee laughed.
Those tiny physical adjustments are what turn an okay photo into a great one.
Steam Train In Germany
Morning In England
The Rainbow Road In Seydisfjordur, Iceland
And while there are rules worth learning, there are also rules worth breaking. Photographer Smith, also quoted in The Guardian, says she approaches photos in two ways: “One is emotionally driven and one is aesthetically driven.”
Sometimes, she ignores composition or light altogether to capture a feeling. And that’s the beauty of it. Photography isn’t always a science, it’s emotion, too.
Stag Standing In Fog And Red Flowers
My Loyal Friend In The Austrian Alps
Bedroom With An Ocean View
Otter Cove Residence. US$35 million buys a phenomenal view.
Finally, patience and timing are everything. As landscape photographer Will Davies told The Guardian, “With landscape photography, the first step is to know when you’re going to have a chance of a great photo.”
Misty autumn mornings, the moment when snow begins to melt, or just after a storm—those transitions are what make landscapes special. You can’t always control conditions, but you can learn to anticipate them.
At the end of the day, every photographer, beginner or pro, is chasing the same thing: a moment worth remembering. Whether it’s a beam of light across a window, a stranger’s smile, or a calm horizon, the magic lies in noticing it and giving it space to shine.
Antarctica Sunset
Looks like what happens when a fantasy prophecy is fulfilled
Black Beach, Iceland
A Neighborhood Inside A Repurposed Stadium
After the Osaka baseball team stopped playing at the stadium, it was reperpoused as a showcase for model homes. The stadium was demolished in 1998.
Japan
Pitch Black
Winter In Estonia
Theatre From Behind The Stage
The juxtaposition of the traditional seating area with the modern back-stage always surprises me.
Rolex In The Rain
It's one of four at the Keeneland racecourse in Lexington, Kentucky.
Moon Rising Over The Dolomites, Italy
New York
Penguins On Iceberg
Se my other post on this, for the image I had a bad link to here before edit.
Frogs Piggybacking On A Caiman
Another. When your Uber driver is sketchy, but everyone's to drunk to care, meme.
Reflection
Nature Paints It's Own Canvas
Shadows Of Chicago Over Frozen Lake Michigan, USA
Plague Fort, Saint Petersburg
Snowy Night In Hokkaido (Northern Japan)
A Spider's Paw
Snow On The Water
A Gate At A Balinese Temple
Pura Penateran Agung Lempuyang. It is the first, and lowest of a complex of 7 temples that lead up Mount Lempuyang in East Bali. The complex is one of the oldest and most sacred Hindu temples on the island.
Bridge
Strawberry Greenhouses
A Beautiful Sunrise In The Netherlands!
Thunder Bay, Ontario
Reine, Norway
If this were a puzzle I would want it. In fact if most of these were puzzles I would want them.
Milky Way And Jupiter
A Splash Of Red In Winter
River In Iceland
A Canyon In France
A Town In The Desert
It's called Huacachina in Peru. A tourist trap. And apparently it stinks from the murky water.
The Tree Beneath The Bridge Of Time
A Bird's Eye View Of Lombard Street
1980 Eruption Of Mount St. Helens
Photo by Richard "Dick" Lasher, who apparently managed to escape the blast.
Red Fissure
Japan In Winter
Kirkjufell At Sunset
The Grand Canyon Lit Only By Lightning
Houses In Netherlands
The Eye Of God Cave In Bulgaria
Downtown Vancouver’s Skyline From The Passenger Seat Of An Airplane
C-130 Flying Over A Forest Fire In California
Empire State Building Framed
Dusk Of My 34th Birthday
The Lonely Tree
The Natural Rainbow
Violet Road
Banff National Park, Canada
Men At Work
Hidden Paths Of NYC
Birds In The Fog
Cat Photo
For those who own cats, do you ever wish you could have a time machine and go back and back and back to see all the cats your cat came from?
Bow Lake Under A New Zealand Sky
This isn't in New Zealand, it's in Banff National Park in Canada.
Ducks In Morning Fog
Sky, Siena, Italy
San Francisco
Central Park, New York
Strawberry Supermoon From Last Night
A Resort In The Maldives
It Was Worth Going Out At 3am To See The Fog…
No Stars
Sunrise
A Bird's Eye View Of An Amusement Park
Milky Way Core In Costa Rica
I think that's more like "A view of the centre of the Milky Way from Costa Rica". I'm pretty sure Central America isn't actually the heart of our galaxy. 😉🤣
Mount Robson Provincial Park, British Columbia, Canada
Foggy Day On A Tennessee Creek
M/S Alpo In A Mist
The 13th Full Moon Of 2020
Swedish Winter
The Naturalist Shack
Waking Up At 5am Has It's Benefits!
Maybe, but those benefits are few and far between. ~signed, a night person
Mount Fuji, Japan
An Overhead Shot Of Muhammad Ali Celebrating A Knockdown
What's Under The Bridge
Photo Taken Out The Second Story Window Of An Abandoned Farmhouse In Montana
Uss Wisconsin Parked At The End Of The Street
A Lone Tree
Looking Up Through An Old Ironworks Chimney
Valley Of Fire State Park, Nevada
Solar Panels
Not solar panels that create electricity. Just mirrors. That reflect heat to a huge column and store heat and create electricity from heat, thus bla bla bla 👍
Sunrise Over Jefferson Park Oregon
Dunes
Choose Your Path
Morning After
Invisible Man
Photo editing trick. Cool but doesn’t really fit the genre.
