A moody cityscape featuring a skyline of skyscrapers shrouded in thick fog or smog, contrasting with dark residential rooftops and trees in the foreground.
Tags:
PHOTO INFO
- Image Size
- 3648x5472px
- File Size
- 515.69KB
- resolution
- 5K
- License
- Commercial use free
- Aesthetic Score
- 74/100
VISUAL ATTRIBUTES OF THIS STOCK PHOTO
- Color temperature
- warm_neutral
- Brightness
- mid_tone
- Saturation
- desaturated
- Lighting Source
- natural
- Lighting Condition
- foggy
- Negative Space
- large
- Negative Space Location
- top
- Depth Of Field
- deep
- Has People
- none
- Season
- unknown
- Time Of Day
- dawn
- Shot Scale
- wide
- Background Type
- urban_scene
- Orientation
- vertical
- Composition Style
- centeredlayered
- Dominant colors
- beigegrayblack
- Palette Style
- monochromedark_moody
- Mood
- mysteriousmelancholicmoody
- Style
- cinematicurban
- Subject type
- cityscapearchitecture
aesthetic analysis & score
The image succeeds in creating a strong, moody atmosphere through its use of haze and muted tones, though the lack of sharp detail limits its versatility for some commercial applications.
Composition & Framing
75The vertical orientation effectively emphasizes the height of the skyscrapers while grounding the image with the residential foreground.
Lighting & exposure
70The lighting is soft and diffused due to the heavy haze, creating a muted atmosphere without harsh shadows.
Color harmony & palette
80The monochromatic beige and gray tones create a cohesive, moody, and atmospheric palette.
Visual impact & mood
78The heavy fog creates a mysterious, somewhat melancholic, and cinematic mood that is visually striking.
Technical Quality & Clarity
65The image is intentionally soft and hazy, which reduces sharpness but serves the atmospheric intent.
Subject clarity & focal hierarchy
72The central skyscraper acts as a clear focal point, emerging from the mist above the darker foreground elements.
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