Dobbins Landing at Night
Posted December 28th, 2006 @ 11:56pm by Erik J. Barzeski
Ron and I ventured to Dobbins Landing tonight at about 7:15 to shoot the holiday lighting the city of Erie puts on the tower there. It was a good use of my evening, and I learned a fair amount. These photos are untouched except some moderate angle adjustments, cropping, and resizing. EXIF data follows each photo. All photos were shot with a Canon Digital Rebel XT, and all but the first were shot with the IS 28-135 USM lens. ISO 100 was used with every shot.
Shot the Coast Guard building from short of the Bicentennial Tower just to get an idea what to expect for the evening.
The Bicentennial Tower itself. I wasn't perfectly in line with the center of the walkway (notice the difference in spacing on the support lights). This leads to a slight "tilting" appearance, even though the center of the frame is perfectly vertical.
From the platform about one story above street level in front of the Bicentennial Tower looking back up State Street.
Same as the above, only shot vertically.
Next, I walked around to the back of the Bicentennial Tower and shot straight up at the tower. I wish the sky was a bit darker in this one, but there's a lot of light pollution when looking in this direction - the pier, State Street, etc.
This is the GAF factory just left of the pier (if you're looking at the tower). I shot it to try to capture the smoke plume, which I think looks pretty nifty. Any longer an exposure and the smoke plume just looked like a faded over area. Any shorter and the picture was underexposed.
After we were done on the Pier, we went over past Sunburst and towards the gravel company. We parked and shot back towards the Bicentennial Tower. Here's a shot of the tower and the reflections from the pier on the water.
And finally, for the heck of it, we shot back towards the Sunburst buildings.
Here's a shot Ron took of Dobbins Landing from near the gravel plant. I used a "shake" flashlight (one of those battery-less "shake-to-charge" flashlights) which uses a blue-ish LED to paint the rock in the foreground off-camera to the right. It looks pretty interesting, if you ask me.
Posted 29 Dec 2006 at 12:38am #
Neat pictures, Erik.
Posted 29 Dec 2006 at 12:38pm #
Great shots Erik! Man, I've got to get back to shooting more...
Posted 17 May 2010 at 2:46pm #
Incredible beautiful shots. Thanks.