A series of four rural landscapes called "Première suete de quatre paysages" ("The First Series of Four Landscapes") was published for the first time in 1641. Around 1643, the Lviv sheets were printed at Pierre Mariette's publishing house. Their performer is considered to be Francois Collignon, the French graphic designer and close friend of della Bella. Collaboration between engravers was a common practice, so Collignon repeatedly made engravings based on Stefano della Bella's drawings or replicated his previously published series. The etching depicts an imaginary countryside covered with hills. In the foreground, a fisherman who just cast his fishing rod sits on the riverbank near a dry tree. On the other bank, there is the shepherd who led the herd of cows to the watering hole. An old wooden bridge across the river leads to a hut seen in the distance. In the background, several villagers are climbing a high wooded hill.