A moody black and white still life photograph featuring a cluster of eggs in a woven basket and a glass salt shaker on a speckled countertop. The high-contrast lighting emphasizes textures and shadows.
Tags:
PHOTO INFO
- Image Size
- 4288x2848px
- File Size
- 1.68MB
- resolution
- 4K
- License
- Commercial use free
- Aesthetic Score
- 78/100
VISUAL ATTRIBUTES OF THIS STOCK PHOTO
- Color temperature
- neutral
- Brightness
- low_key
- Saturation
- desaturated
- Lighting Source
- studio
- Lighting Condition
- indoor
- Negative Space
- small
- Negative Space Location
- none
- Depth Of Field
- medium
- Has People
- none
- Season
- unknown
- Time Of Day
- unknown
- Shot Scale
- close_up
- Background Type
- textured
- Orientation
- horizontal
- Composition Style
- close_upenvironmental
- Dominant colors
- blackwhitegray
- Palette Style
- black_whitedark_moody
- Mood
- moodyrusticcalm
- Style
- still_lifefine_artcinematic
- Subject type
- foodstill_life
aesthetic analysis & score
This is a strong, atmospheric still life that benefits greatly from its dramatic lighting and textural details, making it a compelling monochrome study of simple kitchen objects.
Composition & Framing
75The arrangement of the eggs and salt shaker creates a solid, grounded composition, though the tight framing feels slightly cluttered.
Lighting & exposure
82The dramatic, high-contrast lighting effectively highlights the textures of the eggs and basket while creating deep, moody shadows.
Color harmony & palette
85The monochrome palette is well-executed, utilizing a full range of grays to create depth and visual interest without color distraction.
Visual impact & mood
80The image evokes a rustic, timeless, and slightly mysterious mood through its stark lighting and simple subject matter.
Technical Quality & Clarity
78The image is sharp where it counts, particularly on the foreground eggs and salt shaker, with a pleasing depth of field blurring the background.
Subject clarity & focal hierarchy
80The salt shaker and the two foreground eggs clearly draw the eye first, establishing a strong focal point before leading into the basket.