Greece · Cyclades
The caldera at dusk. Seen properly, from above the crowds.
Editorial
Santorini is the most photographed island in the world, and it knows it. The blue domes, the white walls, the caldera view — these images have circled the globe so many times that arriving feels like recognising something rather than discovering it. That familiarity is both the island's greatest asset and its greatest challenge.
The challenge is crowd management. In July and August, Oia is genuinely overcrowded. The sunset at Oia is a spectator event. The roads are impassable. The experience is diminished. Arrive in May or September, and the island returns to something that justifies all the photographs.
The best hotels here are not on the main path. They are carved into the caldera rim — cave suites hewn from volcanic rock, plunge pools that appear to hang over the Aegean, views that make the photographs inadequate. Canaves Oia sits above the crowds. That elevation is the point.
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