A low-angle architectural shot of a historic stone fortress or castle with a textured retaining wall, featuring a balcony with people and lamp posts against a vast blue sky.
Tags:
PHOTO INFO
- Image Size
- 3325x4980px
- File Size
- 1.46MB
- resolution
- 4K
- License
- Commercial use free
- Aesthetic Score
- 72/100
VISUAL ATTRIBUTES OF THIS STOCK PHOTO
- Color temperature
- warm_neutral
- Brightness
- high_key
- Saturation
- moderate
- Lighting Source
- natural
- Lighting Condition
- midday
- Negative Space
- large
- Negative Space Location
- top
- Depth Of Field
- deep
- Has People
- 2-people
- Season
- summer
- Time Of Day
- afternoon
- Shot Scale
- wide
- Background Type
- sky
- Orientation
- vertical
- Composition Style
- low_angle
- Dominant colors
- beigeblue
- Palette Style
- natural
- Mood
- serenehistoric
- Style
- architecturaltravel
- Subject type
- architecturelandmark
aesthetic analysis & score
The image is a solid, well-exposed architectural shot with a pleasing color palette, though the composition is somewhat standard and lacks a unique visual hook.
Composition & Framing
75The low-angle perspective effectively emphasizes the height and grandeur of the structure, though the placement of the wall dominates the lower frame.
Lighting & exposure
80Bright, natural sunlight illuminates the stone textures well, creating a clear contrast with the deep blue sky.
Color harmony & palette
85The complementary pairing of warm beige stone and cool blue sky creates a visually pleasing and classic color scheme.
Visual impact & mood
70The image conveys a sense of history and solidity, though the composition feels somewhat static.
Technical Quality & Clarity
85The image is sharp with good detail in the stonework and clear separation between the subject and the background.
Subject clarity & focal hierarchy
75The fortress is the clear subject, but the large expanse of sky and the textured wall compete for attention.
Use case suitability scores
Copyspace Layout Usability
85This image is suitable for text overlay layouts — the negative space in the top works for posters, banners, greeting cards and magazine covers needing headline room