Pubs of Edinburgh, Scotland

Historic Pubs in Edinburgh | A Photographer’s Study of Cultural Spaces

I recently spent time photographing pubs throughout Edinburgh, focusing not only on the historic interiors the city is famous for, but also on newer establishments that are quietly building their own character. What interested me wasn’t simply age. It was atmosphere — and how authentic that atmosphere can feel regardless of when a pub first opened its doors.

Walk around Edinburgh for any amount of time and you’ll come across countless pubs in famous places like The Royal Mile, Princess St. and Victoria St. And sure they do serve beer and haggis, but they are tourist traps cloaked as pubs. Venture out a little further and you’ll find some incredible communal living rooms filled with people from all walks of life enjoying a Proper Pint.

Old Edinburgh Pubs: Age You Can Feel

Some of Edinburgh’s traditional pubs carry centuries in their walls. In places like The Bailie, the wood is darkened by time, mirrors show their age in softened edges, and the floors lean slightly from generations of use.

These rooms don’t need to advertise their history. You sense it in the walls and in the unselfconscious way people occupy the space. Regulars move with familiarity across the carpeted floor to their regular stool. The bartender doesn’t perform; he or she simply works. The architecture frames the experience, but it doesn’t dominate it.

There is restraint in these historic pubs. Nothing feels curated for spectacle. The room exists to welcome conversation and return visits.

Newer Edinburgh Pubs with the Same Atmosphere

What surprised me most was how similar the feeling remained in newer pubs. In spaces like The Standing Order, which was once a bank, the design may be more grand, the lines cleaner, the lighting slightly more intentional — yet the atmosphere carries the same steady rhythm.

The bar still anchors the room. People still return to the same seats. Conversations still expand and contract in familiar corners. The success of the space has less to do with its age and more to do with intention and the quiet accumulation of evenings spent there enjoying cask ales.

Authenticity, I was reminded, isn’t guaranteed by centuries. It’s built through use.

What Edinburgh’s Pubs Share with American Dive Bars

Sitting in the back of one Edinburgh pub, I was struck with familiarity. For years I’ve been documenting American dive bars and roadside motels across the West and Midwest. Many of them are far younger than Scotland’s historic pubs, yet the emotional architecture is strikingly similar.

In a small-town dive bar in Wyoming or Nevada, the makings are humbler — paneled walls instead of stone, fluorescent light instead of filtered daylight — but the function is identical. The bar is an anchor. The room absorbs stories. The regulars give it gravity.

The same is true of roadside motels. Some are mid-century survivors with neon signs buzzing against the night. Others have been partially updated. Yet they continue to serve as quiet infrastructure for travelers and locals alike.

The geography changes. The timeline stretches or contracts. The human need remains consistent.

Photographing Cultural Spaces That Endure

Whether historic or newly established, a pub succeeds when it becomes woven into daily life. The same can be said for a dive bar in rural America. Age may add texture, but continuity builds meaning.

Photographing these spaces — in Scotland and in the United States — is less about nostalgia and more about record-keeping. These rooms function as cultural anchors. They are democratic environments. They hold celebration, argument, solitude, and routine without demanding attention.

Edinburgh reinforced something I’ve long believed: authenticity isn’t a design choice. It’s the result of intention and presence.

View the American Dive Bars & Roadside Motels Gallery

If you’re drawn to spaces with atmosphere, history, and lived-in character, I invite you to view my ongoing series documenting American dive bars and roadside motels throughout the United States.

→ View the full American Dive Bars & Roadside Motels gallery
→ Licensing inquiries welcome

Red leather bar stools lined up on patterned carpet inside a traditional Edinburgh pub

Worn red leather stools rest quietly on patterned carpet, the kind of small detail that reveals how long a pub has been lived in rather than designed.

Man leaning on bar counter inside traditional Edinburgh pub at night

Through the window, a quiet exchange unfolds at the bar — a familiar posture, a familiar ritual, the steady rhythm of an evening in an Edinburgh pub.

Kay’s Bar illuminated at night on cobblestone street in Edinburgh

Kay’s Bar glows against the dark stone of the city, a small corner pub holding its ground beneath the streetlight and chimney-lined skyline.

Exterior facade of Cafe Royal in Edinburgh with hanging plants and ornate stonework

The facade of Cafe Royal stands with carved stone and hanging greenery, its Victorian architecture hinting at the grandeur waiting just inside.

Wide interior view of Cafe Royal in Edinburgh with ornate ceiling, carved columns, and evening crowd

Inside Cafe Royal, carved columns and gilded ceilings frame a room that feels almost theatrical. Conversations move between tables while the architecture quietly holds the weight of another century.

Portrait of man in suit standing thoughtfully inside Edinburgh pub

A moment of stillness at the bar — one hand at his chin, the noise of the room fading as he stands briefly alone in his thoughts.

Window sign reading Purveyor of Quality Cask Ales inside Edinburgh pub

Lettering on glass announces “Purveyor of Quality Cask Ales,” a quiet declaration of standards that predate modern branding.

Close-up of boots resting on red patterned carpet inside traditional pub

Boots and corduroy pants planted firmly on worn carpet — the kind of grounded detail that says more about a place than any wide shot ever could.

Wooden doorway entrance to the Oyster Bar at Cafe Royal in Edinburgh with etched glass panels

The Oyster Bar entrance at Cafe Royal stands beneath carved wood and etched glass, a narrow threshold between the noise of the main room and a more intimate corner of the pub.

Group of women laughing at table inside Cafe Royal Edinburgh

At the Cafe Royal in Edinburgh friends lean in close at a small round table, their laughter rising into a room that has held a century of similar evenings.

Bartender serving pint of beer inside The Bailie Bar in Edinburgh

The Bailie Bar- Edinburgh, Scotland

Ornate ceiling and crowded bar interior at The Standing Order in Edinburgh

Beneath gilded ceilings and carved arches, the bar hums with conversation — architecture and atmosphere sharing the same space at The Standing Order in Edinburgh

Driving across America

Cross Country Road Trip - America - Photography

There aren’t a lot of positive things things to say about American highways. Whenever possible I try avoid the soulless stretches of poorly maintained pavement that teach you very little about the country and the towns/people that inhabit it. The 15 on the other hand is something special. It’s one very long stretch of highway that’s as fascinating as any “blue highway” (backroad) in the USA. I’ve personally been traveling this road since 2006 during the move from Upstate, NY to San Diego, CA. It blew my mind then and still does today. Once you get north of the clusterfuck that is Los Angeles /Riverside County and into the desert, there’s a lot to love. Images can be made from the highway or, if you want to get more intimate, try ducking off into one of the many small towns along the way.

Last month I was working on a a few stories up in Montana without a ton of time to get there, so The 15 it was, straight up north from southern California. Regardless, I ALWAYS find time in-between destinations for one or many of my ongoing series. This trip found images that will fit nicely into the “America” and “Hotel” series.

Places like Lima, Montana are endlessly fascinating no matter how many small towns I see. As someone who lives in a frustratingly populated place, it’s stimulating to stand in and see the beginning and end of a town only 75 yards long surrounded by nothing but rolling hills. You can’t help but wonder what everyday life is life for the people of that community.

The second set of images were made in St. George, Utah. Also interesting for different reasons. Although much bigger than Lima, it’s still a small town “in the middle of nowhere”. One thing that stands out is the way they build homes there to blend in to the environment. The color palette matches almost seamlessly.

American Photography

American Photography - Road Trip - Travel

Americana - Wall Art - Photo Prints - Open Road

Taking time to think about a body of work is such and important part of the process as you continue to build it. And as time goes on attention needs to be given to the “holes” that are inevitably lurking in said work. Interiors are one of the many holes that I need to fill. For ten years now I’ve happily traveled around America photographing various aspects of it. And lately, collaboration in the form of outside eyeballs/opinions has been a major focus in order to figure out exactly what is or isn’t working. When we create in a bubble as so many photographers do, it’s easy to get lost on a track that might not be going the right direction. There are so many questions we need to ask ourselves all along the way, which probably won’t get brought up if we don’t receive input from other unbiased people. So, while I never plan on stopping my America series, I’m trying to be much more focused and open about what to shoot and what horses I’ve already beaten to death. Much more than that though, how many other photographers have already done what you’re doing? If the answer is “a lot”, then how can you change your contribution to offer the viewer something different?

Click here to see more from my AMERICA series.

Best Distillery in Los Angeles

Dead of Night Distillery

Craft Spirits - Los Angeles

It seems that most people think of gin as that nasty pine needle tasting liquor that your grandfather had at his house. And I used to think the same thing. 6 months ago if you offered me a gin drink, I would have ignorantly turned it down thinking that all gin just tastes like floor cleaner. Dead of Night Distillery has completely changed my mind though. I’ve always been a beer guy, never much for liquor, but tasting this gin and the cocktails made with it, has me singing a different tune. Really great stuff and i’m excited to see where this recently opened distillery goes. If you’re anywhere in the Los Angeles and looking for spirits to make great craft cocktails, look up where to buy Dead of Night’s products. Aside from their vodka, gin, and rum, the head distiller also creates incredible small batch experimental spirits like limoncello, aquavit, and amaro.

Follow them on Instagram @dead_of_night_distilery or go to their WEBSITE.