Photography Guide: Best Angles & Settings (expanded)
Capture Chicago's layered skyline with intention — this section gives practical camera guidance and composition ideas.
Best times for photography
- Golden hour (sunrise/sunset): Warm light on glass façades; ideal for Riverwalk and Michigan Avenue.
- Blue hour (after sunset): City lights reflect beautifully on the river and wet pavements.
- Midday: Good for detailed architectural textures under hard light; use polarizer to reduce glare.
Camera basics & starter settings
- Mode: Aperture priority for depth-of-field control.
- Aperture: f/5.6–f/8 for architecture; f/2.8–f/4 for subject isolation.
- ISO: 100–400 daylight; bump only as needed.
- Shutter: Use stabilization or increase ISO if shooting from a moving bus.
Gear & positioning
- Upper deck: Superior viewpoint; avoid leaning on rails to keep shots steady.
- Polarizer: Cuts river reflections and deepens sky.
- Lenses: 24–70mm for versatile framing; 70–200mm for details and compressing scenes.
Composition ideas
- Use bridges and river rails to frame the skyline.
- Include foreground elements (people, benches) to convey scale.
- Try vertical panoramas from the Riverwalk to show building height.
Pro workflow: Scout from the bus, note the best angles, hop off, and re-shoot from land for sharper images.