A low-angle architectural shot of the upper section of the CN Tower in Toronto, featuring its concrete shaft and observation deck against a dramatic, overcast sky with hints of blue.
Tags:
PHOTO INFO
- Image Size
- 5184x3456px
- File Size
- 2.06MB
- resolution
- 5K
- License
- Commercial use free
- Aesthetic Score
- 78/100
VISUAL ATTRIBUTES OF THIS STOCK PHOTO
- Color temperature
- cool
- Brightness
- mid_tone
- Saturation
- muted
- Lighting Source
- natural
- Lighting Condition
- overcast
- Negative Space
- large
- Negative Space Location
- surrounding
- Depth Of Field
- deep
- Has People
- none
- Season
- unknown
- Time Of Day
- afternoon
- Shot Scale
- medium
- Background Type
- natural_scene
- Orientation
- horizontal
- Composition Style
- centeredvertical
- Dominant colors
- graybluewhite
- Palette Style
- naturaldark_moody
- Mood
- dramaticmoody
- Style
- architecturedocumentary
- Subject type
- architecturelandmark
aesthetic analysis & score
This is a strong architectural study that benefits from its sharp detail and symmetrical framing, though the moody, slightly dark exposure limits its broad commercial appeal compared to brighter alternatives.
Composition & Framing
85The centered, vertical composition effectively emphasizes the height and symmetry of the tower structure.
Lighting & exposure
75The overcast lighting provides soft, even illumination on the concrete, though the overall image feels slightly underexposed.
Color harmony & palette
80The muted grays of the concrete and clouds harmonize well with the subtle pop of blue sky at the bottom.
Visual impact & mood
70The moody, overcast atmosphere creates a somewhat somber but dramatic visual impact.
Technical Quality & Clarity
90The image is sharp with excellent detail visible in the concrete texture and structural elements.
Subject clarity & focal hierarchy
95The tower is the undeniable focal point, clearly isolated against the sky background.
Use case suitability scores
Copyspace Layout Usability
85This image is suitable for text overlay layouts — the negative space in the surrounding works for posters, banners, greeting cards and magazine covers needing headline room