Aurora : Northern Lights in Green, Pink, and Purple
The Northern Lights, or Aurora Borealis, are one of Earth’s most spectacular natural shows. Curtains of green, pink, purple, and blue ripple across the Arctic sky, shifting shape in seconds. The beauty is backed by science charged particles from the Sun collide with Earth’s atmosphere, producing light displays so surreal they feel like a dream. For centuries, they’ve drawn explorers, scientists, and travellers into the far north, each hoping for that once-in-a-lifetime view.
These seven photographs capture the Northern Lights in ways that will make you want to pack your bags and head towards the Arctic Circle.
The Milky Way Meets the Aurora
It’s rare enough to see the Milky Way arching across the sky but in this shot, it shares the frame with the aurora’s dancing ribbons. The deep blues of the galaxy melt into the electric greens and pinks of the Northern Lights, creating a cosmic scene that feels infinite.
Cabin Under the Lights
Imagine a snow-covered cabin in the Arctic wilderness, its windows glowing with firelight. Above it, the aurora ripples like a living painting. This photo captures that contrast warm human shelter below, cold shimmering sky above reminding you how small and lucky you are to witness it.

Green Waves Over Iceland
In Iceland, the aurora often forms sweeping arcs that stretch from horizon to horizon. Here, the lights reflect off a frozen lake, turning the icy surface into a mirror of the sky. The stillness below makes the movement above feel even more alive.
Aurora Crown in Finland
High in Finnish Lapland, the Northern Lights sometimes form a circular pattern overhead a perfect luminous crown. This image captures that moment, the lights radiating outward like a halo over the snowbound landscape. It feels sacred, almost as if the sky is blessing the earth.
Purple Nights in Norway
While green is the most common aurora colour, Norway’s far north sometimes sees deep purples and magentas. In this photograph, those rare hues wash across the sky, mingling with faint greens. The effect is both soft and intense, like an abstract watercolor painted by the cosmos.
Above the Ice Hotel, Sweden
Sweden’s famous ice hotels are works of art carved from snow and ice, lit softly from within. On nights when the aurora appears overhead, it’s a double masterpiece human craft glowing below, nature’s light swirling above. This shot captures both in a single breathtaking frame.
Reflections in a Norwegian Fjord
Some fjords lie so still on winter nights that they mirror the sky perfectly. In this image, the aurora’s sweeping colours are doubled in the water, making it feel as though you’re standing in the middle of two identical worlds one above, one below.