3D print the Alps
Some peaks are famous specifically for their shape from one angle. The Matterhorn is the clearest example there is.
Center an area on Zermatt and the ridge running up to the Matterhorn, turn buildings off, and the elevation data does essentially all the work — a near-symmetrical pyramid rising sharply out of its surrounding ridgelines, unmistakable even at a rough scale. Push the height multiplier up a little past 1:1 if you want the peak to read clearly on a small print; mountain relief tends to look flatter than it feels once it's shrunk onto a desk-sized model.
The Dolomites, further east in Italy, are a different kind of dramatic — the Tre Cime di Lavaredo are three near-vertical limestone towers standing apart from a plateau, a strikingly different silhouette from a single alpine peak like the Matterhorn.