Travel

Capturing the beauty of Portugal’s coastline

Lifelong Algarve local Mathias Fernandes straps a drone to his camera bag and rediscovers the home he once took for granted

Aerial view of rocky cliffs and clear blue waters along a coastline, with a small boat leaving a wake near the shore.
Aerial view of rocky cliffs and clear blue waters along a coastline, with a small boat leaving a wake near the shore.

The first picture in Mathias Fernandes’s selection could be a postcard: russet cliffs dissolving into pistachio-green surf. Yet for the man behind the lens, the scene is not a souvenir but a revelation.

“The Algarve is where my love for photography truly began,” he says. “Once I picked up my camera the Algarve revealed itself to me with all its beauty, variety, and surprises.” 

Fernandes grew up minutes from these beaches, but it took a restless streak – and a full-frame Canon paired later with a drone – to appreciate the region’s cinematic contrasts. Warm sandstone arches at sunrise. Ivory sea caves exposed only at the lowest tides. Fishing boats that appear like confetti over the Atlantic.

Aerial view of waves crashing onto a sandy beach, with a person casting a long shadow, and rocky formations on the left.

Photo: Mathias Fernandes

Rocky cliffs overlooking a large rock formation in the ocean, with seagulls flying above the water.

Photo: Mathias Fernandes

Aerial view of a secluded beach with turquoise water, surrounded by rocky cliffs and a winding wooden staircase leading down to the sand.

Photo: Mathias Fernandes

Person in a white dress stands on a sandy beach surrounded by cliffs, with gentle waves lapping at the shore during sunset.

Photo: Mathias Fernandes

Beach scene with people on sandy shore, surrounded by cliffs and buildings, under a clear sky. Palm fronds frame the sunlit view.

Photo: Mathias Fernandes

People playing soccer on a crowded sandy beach, with waves and umbrellas in the background.

Photo: Mathias Fernandes

Fernandes likes to say the Algarve is both his classroom and his canvas.

“I took these beaches for granted until the camera taught me to really look,” he admits. “That sense of exploration continues to fuel my work to this day.”

Today, he roams the coastline on dawn patrols, sometimes alone, sometimes with visiting creatives who connect with him through Instagram. The Atlantic, he believes, rewards persistence: “There’s always another angle, another colour.”

Light is always what I pay the most attention to

His favourite hour is the sliver just after dawn when cliffs blush pink and onshore breezes haven’t yet churned the water. From the sky he composes near-abstract studies of form and shadow; on foot he favours longer focal lengths for “cleaner shots with lots of compression”, a trick that flattens distance and makes sea stacks look monumental.

A person stands on a beach at sunset, with gentle waves and a large rock formation in the sea, reflecting warm light on the water.

Photo: Mathias Fernandes

Person standing on a serene, reflective beach with misty cliffs in the background, holding a surfboard under a pale blue sky.

Photo: Mathias Fernandes

Fernandes’s workflow oscillates between meticulous planning and instinct. He spends “hundreds of hours on Google Maps” cross-referencing tide charts and sun-angle calculators, but still delights in getting drenched by a rogue wave on a supposedly calm morning.

“Preparation is what leads to good performance,” he laughs. “But you also leave space for the unexpected.”

Person running on a reflective beach towards large rock formations in the sea, under a cloudy sky.

Photo: Mathias Fernandes

A person in the sea looks at a large, isolated rock formation under a clear blue sky.

Photo: Mathias Fernandes

Two dolphins swimming together in clear blue water, creating gentle ripples on the surface.

Photo: Mathias Fernandes

One evening near Carrapateira, the wind cut so sharply he warmed his hands against the engine of a vintage car he had hired as a prop, clicking the shutter whenever the airborne sand caught the backlight of the setting sun. Another day he met a hero of his – a German surf photographer – purely because both had chosen the same obscure cove at low tide.

Person sitting on a white convertible by a cliff, overlooking the ocean with rocky hills in the background.

Photo: Mathias Fernandes

A person stands on the beach at sunset, with waves in the background and a large rock formation in the sea.

Photo: Mathias Fernandes

Ultimately Fernandes hopes his pictures do more than populate Instagram moodboards. “My goal is to inspire others to go out and make the most of life,” he says – a credo as sweeping as his horizons. 

Whether you’re standing on a cliff edge at Cabo de São Vicente or scrolling these 21 frames on a grey Tuesday commute, the invitation is the same: look closer, chase the light, and don’t assume you know your own backyard.

A lone surfer walks along a sunlit, sandy beach, casting a long shadow near the gentle waves.

Photo: Mathias Fernandes

Two people stand in a sunlit cave, surrounded by towering rocky walls, with light streaming through an overhead opening.

Photo: Mathias Fernandes

Aerial view of a sandy beach with clear turquoise water, bordered by rugged cliffs. A lone person walks along the shoreline.

Photo: Mathias Fernandes

Lessons for the rest of us

For travellers hoping to replicate the magic, Fernandes offers three rules of thumb:

  1. Watch the tides. Low tide reveals cathedral-like grottos otherwise underwater.

  2. Shoot west at sunset, east at sunrise. The cliffs act as natural reflectors, doubling the warmth.

  3. Embrace harsh noon light for documentary looks. “With the right edit you get that beautiful summer analogue vibe.”

Photo: Mathias Fernandes

Aerial view of a secluded beach surrounded by rocky cliffs, with sunlight casting long shadows and waves gently lapping the shore.

Photo: Mathias Fernandes

Sunrise over a rocky arch on a serene beach, casting long shadows on the sand with a lone person standing near the water's edge.

Photo: Mathias Fernandes

A woman in a red polka dot dress walks along a sandy beach, with large rock formations and waves in the background.

Photo: Mathias Fernandes

Gear-wise he keeps it simple: a Canon R6 MK II with a 24-105 mm lens for versatility, a 100-400 mm for compression, and a DJI Mavic 3 Pro drone for birds-eye drama. Everything else fits in a single backpack, handy when a stealthy wave tries to upend both artist and equipment.