A view of the Sydney, New South Wales skyline featuring the reflective glass facade of the Centre Street tower, a Marriott hotel, and a busy ferry wharf in the foreground under a cloudy sky.
Tags:
PHOTO INFO
- Image Size
- 2804x2585px
- File Size
- 635.65KB
- resolution
- 2K
- License
- Commercial use free
- Aesthetic Score
- 72/100
VISUAL ATTRIBUTES OF THIS STOCK PHOTO
- Color temperature
- cool
- Brightness
- mid_tone
- Saturation
- moderate
- Lighting Source
- natural
- Lighting Condition
- overcast
- Negative Space
- small
- Negative Space Location
- top
- Depth Of Field
- deep
- Has People
- none
- Season
- unknown
- Time Of Day
- afternoon
- Shot Scale
- wide
- Background Type
- urban_scene
- Orientation
- horizontal
- Composition Style
- layered
- Dominant colors
- bluegraywhite
- Palette Style
- naturalurban
- Mood
- professionalurban
- Style
- documentaryarchitectural
- Subject type
- cityscapearchitectureurban_scene
aesthetic analysis & score
This is a solid, well-composed architectural shot that effectively captures the density and verticality of the Sydney waterfront, though the overcast weather keeps it from being visually stunning.
Composition & Framing
75The composition effectively layers the ferry wharf, the elevated train tracks, and the towering skyscrapers to create a sense of urban depth.
Lighting & exposure
70The overcast lighting provides even exposure across the scene, though it lacks the dynamic contrast that would make the image truly pop.
Color harmony & palette
72The cool blue tones of the glass tower and water harmonize well with the neutral grays and whites of the surrounding architecture and sky.
Visual impact & mood
65The image conveys a realistic, documentary-style mood of a bustling city, though the flat lighting slightly dampens its visual drama.
Technical Quality & Clarity
80The image is sharp and detailed, clearly capturing the textures of the buildings and the infrastructure in the foreground.
Subject clarity & focal hierarchy
85The tall, reflective Centre Street tower naturally draws the eye as the primary focal point, standing out against the other buildings.