SINTRA, PORTUGAL | 'A romantic fog-draped hillside where castles rise from the forest'
Sintra sits in the misty Serra de Sintra mountains, just twenty-five kilometers west of Lisbon, where the Atlantic fog rolls inland and clings to pine forests and granite peaks. This is a landscape of hidden palaces and eccentric gardens, where Portuguese royalty and European aristocrats built their summer retreats among the ruins of Moorish fortifications. The light here is famously changeable, shifting from soft gray to golden in minutes as the fog lifts and reveals candy-colored turrets and wild parkland that tumbles down the hillsides.
The watercolor palette is built on muted greens and stone grays, punctuated by the shocking yellows and reds of Pena Palace that almost glow against the darker forest. Morning fog brings cool blues and lavenders, while afternoon sun warms the ochre walls of old estates and the terracotta roofs of the historic center, all framed by the deep forest greens that blanket the serra year-round.