South Coast Wanderings

Coastal Vibez Client • February 18, 2026

Narooma – Chasing Light on the South Coast


There are places that quietly get under your skin as a photographer. For me, Narooma on the South Coast of NSW is one of them. Every time I load the car with camera bodies, lenses, filters, and a thermos of coffee, I know I’m heading somewhere that delivers—consistently, and in all conditions.

As a photographer, my focus has always been coastal landscapes, natural light, and authentic moments. Narooma gives me all three in abundance.


Sunrise at Australia Rock

If there’s a signature frame from Narooma, it’s Australia Rock. I’ve shot it in moody grey dawns, blazing summer sunrises, and glassy calm mornings when the inlet looks like polished steel.

I usually arrive well before first light. The pre-dawn blue hour is where the magic begins—long exposures smoothing the water, subtle colour shifts in the sky, and that iconic rock formation silhouetted against the horizon. As the sun breaks, warm tones wrap around the headland and reflections dance across the channel.

From a technical perspective, it’s a dream location:

  • Strong foreground interest
  • Natural leading lines
  • Elevated vantage points
  • Dynamic skies rolling in from the Pacific

From a creative perspective, it’s pure coastal storytelling.


Turquoise Waters at Glasshouse Rocks

Further south, Glasshouse Rocks is where drama lives. The volcanic formations rise straight from impossibly clear turquoise water. On a calm day, it feels serene. On a big swell, it becomes raw and powerful.

I love working this location with a mix of shutter speeds:


  • Slow exposures for that silky, ethereal feel
  • Faster shutter speeds to freeze the energy of crashing waves


The textures here are incredible—weathered stone, swirling foam patterns, shifting cloud structures. It’s the kind of place that challenges you to keep experimenting.


Golden Hour Over Wagonga Inlet

When the sun begins to drop behind the hills, Wagonga Inlet becomes a mirror. Boats settle into still water. The sky ignites with oranges and pinks. Reflections stretch across the frame like brush strokes.

These evenings remind me why I started Craig Stevens Photography in the first place. Coastal light has personality. It shifts quickly, demands attention, and rewards patience.

There’s something grounding about standing quietly with a tripod as the day fades. It’s not just about capturing an image—it’s about being present in that exact slice of time.


The Rhythm of the South Coast

Narooma isn’t rushed. It moves at a different pace. Fishermen head out early. Locals walk the shoreline at dusk. The ocean sets the schedule.

As a travel and landscape photographer, that rhythm matters. It allows space to observe:

  • Cloud movement
  • Tide patterns
  • Changing light angles
  • Subtle colour transitions

Every return trip gives me something new. Different swell direction. Different wind. Different sky. Same coastline—completely different mood.



Why Narooma Keeps Pulling Me Back

Some destinations are spectacular but fleeting. Narooma is layered. The more time I spend here, the more I see.

It’s not just about iconic locations like Australia Rock or Glasshouse Rocks. It’s the quiet headlands, the shifting sands, the pastel dawns, and those deep indigo evenings when the last light fades into the Pacific.

Through Craig Stevens Photography, my goal is simple: capture the essence of coastal NSW in its most honest form. Narooma makes that easy.

And every time I pack up after a shoot, I already know—I’ll be back.



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