Travel-Inspired Gifts: Fine Art Prints of the Places People Love
Not a generic gift. A print of somewhere that actually matters to them.
Shop Now →The best travel-inspired gifts start with a place, not a product. Someone you know has a place — a lake they drove three hours to reach every summer, a mountain they finally stood on, a valley in a country they're still thinking about. A fine art print of that place sidesteps most of the usual gifting anxiety. You don't need to know their wall colours or whether they lean abstract or figurative. The place does that work for you. The place does all the work.
This guide covers how to choose a print that lands — what makes location work better than landmark, how to think about size and framing, and which prints tend to work best as gifts.
Why the Specific Place Matters More Than the Famous One
The most successful travel-inspired print gifts are rarely of famous landmarks. They're of a specific valley, a lesser-known lake, or a quiet corner of a place the recipient considers theirs. The more specific the location, the more it lands. A print of the Matterhorn is beautiful. A print of the exact view from the path above Zermatt where someone proposed, or first saw the peak through clearing cloud — that's something else entirely.
The image is just the vehicle. What you're actually giving them is a specific memory made permanent. When someone sees a print of a place they know well, the response is immediate and personal. They're not admiring a photograph — they're remembering something. I've had customers tell me the person they gave it to cried. Nobody cries at a gift voucher.
It also means you don't need to find the most dramatic shot. Calm works. A boathouse on a still lake at golden hour. A cliffside guesthouse tucked into a rock face. A cable car disappearing into cloud above the valley they skied last winter. The image just needs to be honest to the place — and the place needs to be theirs.
If you're looking for ideas by destination, the guides on the best gifts for people who love Switzerland and gifts for mountain lovers go deeper into specific locations.
Ammersee, Bavaria, Germany
The Ammersee sits about an hour south-west of Munich, close enough to the Alps that the light on the water picks up something of the mountains. This shot — bare winter trees, a weathered boathouse, the lake perfectly still — is the kind of image that means a lot to people who know the lake and reads beautifully to those who don't. Calm, specific, and quietly Bavarian.
View Print →
Choosing the Right Print for Someone Else
The main anxiety with giving art as a gift is getting it wrong — choosing something you like that the other person has to politely hang in the spare room. A location print sidesteps most of that. The connection to the place gives it value independent of whether it matches the sofa. Most people will find somewhere to put a print of somewhere they love, even if it takes a while.
That said, a few things are worth thinking about. Black and white prints travel better across different interiors than colour ones do. Colour landscapes are specific — they can fight with a room if the palette doesn't work. If you don't know much about the recipient's home, a monochrome print of a mountain or coastline is a safer choice. It's not a compromise; some of the strongest landscape photography is black and white. But if you know the room and know the place, a colour print with soft tones — early morning light, mist, still water — tends to sit well almost anywhere.
For places with a strong sense of character — the Appenzell hills in Switzerland, the Hooker Valley in New Zealand, a side street in Bali — the image doesn't need to show the most recognisable view. It just needs to feel true to the place. Browse the full print collection by location if you know where you're aiming for.
The Aescher Guesthouse print is a good example of this. The Berggasthaus Aescher is known to anyone who's spent time in Appenzell, but it's not a tourist-poster image. It's specific enough to mean something to someone who's been there, and unusual enough to be interesting to someone who hasn't.



Size, Framing, and the Practical Side of Giving a Print
Size is the one area where gifting a print gets slightly complicated. If you know the wall, it's easy — measure it and work back from there. A 50x70cm print above a sofa reads as a proper artwork. A 30x40cm in the same spot looks like a photograph someone has temporarily put up. Both are right in the right context; the mistake is putting the smaller size in a space that needs the larger one.
If you don't know the wall, go bigger rather than smaller. A large print can always find a home. A print that's too small for any obvious space tends to get leaned against a wall and forgotten. For a gift, a 50x70cm is a safe default for most living rooms and bedrooms. For hallways and smaller spaces, a 30x40cm or A3 works well. A4 is better as a desk or shelf print than a wall piece.
On framing: an unframed print gives the recipient the freedom to choose their own frame, which matters if you don't know their interior. It also ships flat and arrives in better condition than a framed piece travelling cross-country. A float frame — where the print sits forward of the mount with a gap around the edge — tends to read more as gallery art and less as a standard photograph. If you're giving a framed print, that's the one worth considering. But unframed is rarely the wrong call for a gift.


Balinese Woman Carrying Offerings, Bali
Shot on a quiet road in the early morning, this is one of those images that captures something specific about Bali — not a temple, not a rice terrace, but the everyday ritual that runs through ordinary life there. For anyone who's spent real time on the island, it's immediately recognisable. For anyone who wants to go, it's exactly why.
View Print →Find a print of somewhere they love
Mountains, coastlines, alpine villages, valleys — browse the full collection by location.
Browse Prints →













