Gear for the shoot? A trusty 5D, a 24-70 2.8 and a tripod.
In art and photography, it is always mentioned that "the eyes are the windows to the soul". So when shooting a building, would the windows be the eyes to the soul? :)


This was a short-order task. Take photos asap, have it ready by tomorrow, we need it printed in 24 hours. Drive home, get the gear, get good shots while the sun is high...ouch.



I was able to get a number of good ones with the sun melting the pavement with its strong rays, but I was also able to wait it out to get some dusk shots. Most of the images (if not all) were shot at f8 and up. I still shot in manual so that I can crank down the light as needed.

This image (above) was taken at ISO 50, f10 @ 1/80seconds.
Blue skies for the win! Too much brightness at 2 in the afternoon? Crank down the exposure in-camera. Probably do-able via Photoshop, but if you can do it without having to post-process so much, I just feel it speeds up the work-flow.

This image was taken at IOS 50, f11 @ 1/5seconds.


The last 2 images were shot at F9 and F8 respectively. Both at ISO 50 @ 30.00Seconds.
I'd like to believe the building gave a little grin at the very least in my attempts to make it shine.
*RANT Alert*
Tell me if you've heard this one before: "Excuse me sir, but do you have a permit to shoot here?" Have not heard it yet? You're either a ninja that blends well with the surroundings, or you are blessed by fate. I had a brief encounter that was resolved by a quick elevator run (more like a slow-limp really) up 14 floors then followed by a phone call, but it just made me think of an article i read a while back. I guess you're suspicious if you have a SLR (or DSLR), and all is good if you have a point and shoot.