Solar Orbiter is the most recent solar space mission of ESA and NASA. Of the 10 science instruments on board, six do remote-sensing, detecting photons from the Sun or from the Heliosphere. Whereas Solar Orbiter was in its cruise phase during most of 2020 and 2021 when only the in-situ instruments were taking regular observations, it entered its first science orbit after an Earth flyby in November 2021. In March and Early April 2022 Solar Orbiter passed through its first science perihelion at a distance of 0.33AU to the Sun. During this period, the first set of remote-sensing windows of the mission were scheduled, when the remote sensing instruments took their first images, spectra and magnetograms of the Sun from up close. After a brief introduction to the mission and its remote-sensing payload, the first results from the remote-sensing instruments, as far as they are available, from the cruise phase and from the first perihelion passage will be presented.