Close-up view of clear ice chunks and small floes drifting in dark, rippling river water. The scene captures the texture of melting ice against the moving current, suitable for winter or early spring themes.
Tags:
PHOTO INFO
- Image Size
- 3867x2724px
- File Size
- 2.76MB
- resolution
- 4K
- License
- Commercial use free
- Aesthetic Score
- 65/100
VISUAL ATTRIBUTES OF THIS STOCK PHOTO
- Color temperature
- cool
- Brightness
- mid_tone
- Saturation
- moderate
- Lighting Source
- natural
- Lighting Condition
- midday
- Negative Space
- none
- Negative Space Location
- none
- Depth Of Field
- medium
- Has People
- none
- Season
- winter
- Time Of Day
- afternoon
- Shot Scale
- close_up
- Background Type
- natural_scene
- Orientation
- horizontal
- Composition Style
- pattern
- Dominant colors
- bluewhiteblack
- Palette Style
- natural
- Mood
- calmserene
- Style
- naturedocumentary
- Subject type
- landscaperiver
aesthetic analysis & score
This is a competent, usable stock image that effectively captures the texture and movement of ice in a river, though it lacks a strong compositional anchor to make it truly stand out.
Composition & Framing
65The scattered arrangement of ice chunks creates a natural, organic pattern that fills the frame effectively without a single dominant focal point.
Lighting & exposure
70Bright sunlight reflects off the ice and water ripples, creating high contrast against the dark water, though some highlights are slightly blown out.
Color harmony & palette
75The cool blue tones of the ice and water harmonize well with the dark, almost black undertones of the river, creating a cohesive cold atmosphere.
Visual impact & mood
65The image conveys a crisp, cold mood effectively, capturing the transient nature of melting ice in a flowing river.
Technical Quality & Clarity
60The image is reasonably sharp on the ice chunks, but the overall resolution appears slightly soft, and there is some digital noise in the darker water areas.
Subject clarity & focal hierarchy
60While the ice is clearly the subject, the lack of a single primary focal point means the eye wanders across the various chunks rather than settling on one.