Find a new spark of inspiration each weekday with Caught Our Eye, our signature travel photo series. We break down what makes each image work—so you can sharpen your eye, elevate your craft, and explore the world through a more creative lens.
Some photographs do more than capture light—they capture time itself. This monochrome vision of Prague’s Castle Stairs draws you in like a whispered story, unfolding one cobblestone at a time…
Raindrops blur the edges of Birmingham’s Digbeth district, transforming its gritty charm into something cinematic. In this frame, time slows—the hush of rain, the shimmer of cobblestones, the quiet determination…
In a world obsessed with motion, it’s often stillness that reveals the most profound beauty. Sometimes, the city itself becomes an artist—its glass, steel, and water combining to paint fleeting…
As evening descends upon Kiev, the fog becomes more than weather—it’s a presence, a living veil that softens the city’s pulse into a quiet reverie. Streetlights shimmer like molten gold,…
Some photographs don’t just capture a scene—they breathe life into it. This one arrests time itself: a fleeting waltz of elegance and chance beneath the iron lace of the Eiffel…
Amid the hum of the city, where the ordinary pulse of life moves in predictable measure, a single photograph rises—like a melody breaking through the din, shimmering with quiet wonder.
In an era of auto-adjusted, look-alike travel images, a few photographs still bear the mark of a human eye. One such image captures Holyrood Palace in Edinburgh beneath a brooding…
In the heart of a bustling city, where skyscrapers rise like modern mountains, lies a moment of serene beauty captured in this photograph.
In the heart of Venice, where mist drapes the city in a gauzy veil and wings flicker through the air like living brushstrokes, one photograph distills the essence of travel…
In the heart of Moscow, where the past glows as bright as the present, this photograph captures Red Square at night—an illuminated symphony of light and history. The city’s architecture…