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11th Avenue at Scarth Street
I finally made it up to this spot in the evening. What you see here is a pedestrian crossing overtop of one of the busiest streets in downtown Regina, Saskatchewan. It connects many buildings including Cornwall Centre mall, Bank of Montreal, and various other offices in the core of the city.
The doors are usually locked, but after I could see light coming from the door adjacent to the mall, I knew that we might be in luck. We ventured into the mall and up through where the tunnel connected the mall.
Sure enough, it was open and we were able get a different perspective of this location we have only seen during the day.
What made it difficult was the reflections being cast on the windows when pointed out. I still have some post-processing to do but we'll see how that turns out.
For this image, I ended up toning it right down and getting it really dark. I wanted the outer areas to only show the highlights; reflections on the glass and beams reveal the structure below without showing much detail. Contrasted with the bright channel through the middle and the thin line of lines repeating as the corridor narrows; it really ended up framing nicely.
www.instagram.com/faultyflipflap
www.facebook.com/DWVPhotoworks
11th Avenue at Scarth Street
I finally made it up to this spot in the evening. What you see here is a pedestrian crossing overtop of one of the busiest streets in downtown Regina, Saskatchewan. It connects many buildings including Cornwall Centre mall, Bank of Montreal, and various other offices in the core of the city.
The doors are usually locked, but after I could see light coming from the door adjacent to the mall, I knew that we might be in luck. We ventured into the mall and up through where the tunnel connected the mall.
Sure enough, it was open and we were able get a different perspective of this location we have only seen during the day.
What made it difficult was the reflections being cast on the windows when pointed out. I still have some post-processing to do but we'll see how that turns out.
For this image, I ended up toning it right down and getting it really dark. I wanted the outer areas to only show the highlights; reflections on the glass and beams reveal the structure below without showing much detail. Contrasted with the bright channel through the middle and the thin line of lines repeating as the corridor narrows; it really ended up framing nicely.
www.instagram.com/faultyflipflap
www.facebook.com/DWVPhotoworks