Category Archives: Photographs: San Francisco

Coit Tower, Fog

Coit Tower, Fog
Coit Tower, Fog

Coit Tower, Fog. San Francisco, California. December 16. 2010. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

Swirling fog and mist engulf San Francisco’s Coit Tower and Telegraph Hill.

One more in this series of photographs of the San Francisco waterfront and downtown areas in brightly back-lit, early morning conditions in which the City was nearly obscured by drifting fog. All of the photographs in the series were made from a location near the north end of the Golden Gate Bridge, just a bit up the road into the Marin Headlands. Like several of the others, this one was shot with a 400mm focal length lens, pointing almost directly in the direction of the rising sun. For some of the exposures I had to stand a couple feet in front of the camera, at the maximum extension of my remote release cable, and carefully position my hand to shade the front element of the lens.

Here the fog has almost completely obscured Coit Tower at the top of Telegraph Hill. If you look very carefully to the left of Coit Tower you can barely make out the ghostly image of the top of one of the towers of the San Francisco Oakland Bay Bridge. It was my good fortune that a slightly less opaque section of the drifting fog momentarily framed the summit of Telegraph Hill.

This photograph is not in the public domain and may not be used on websites, blogs, or in other media without advance permission from G Dan Mitchell.

G Dan Mitchell Photography
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San Francisco Skyline, Light Beams

San Francisco Skyline, Light Beams
San Francisco Skyline, Light Beams

San Francisco Skyline, Light Beams. San Francisco, California. December 16, 2010. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

Beams of light from brilliantly lit clouds send beams of light past downtown San Francisco buildings and toward the waterfront.

Anyone who knows San Francisco might be wondering about this light – and I wouldn’t blame them. These were really unusual conditions. Believe it or not, the photograph was made very early in the morning, perhaps a bit less than a half hour after sunrise. Which begs a couple of questions: why is the light coming from the right (west to southwest) at dawn? And, why does the light seem to be coming from such a high angle?

The light beams are not direct sunlight. The sun is actually far to the left of the frame and very low in the sky. Its direct light was blocked by intervening fog clouds. As the clouds moved from left to right, thinner areas in the cloud cover were struck from behind by the very low angle sunlight coming from the left and set aglow. It was the brilliant light from these areas of backlit clouds that cast the light through the mist and between buildings. What you cannot see in the still photograph is that as the clouds moved the beams of light slowly swept from right to left. From moment to moment the light beams would angle from right to left, then straight down, and then left to right.

Another amazing thing was that I appeared to be the only person out making photographs of this…

This photograph is not in the public domain and may not be used on websites, blogs, or in other media without advance permission from G Dan Mitchell.

G Dan Mitchell Photography
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Fog, San Francisco, Dawn

Fog, San Francisco, Dawn
Fog, San Francisco, Dawn

Fog, San Francisco, Dawn. San Francisco, California. December 16, 2010. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

Winter fog illuminated by dawn light engulfs the skyline of San Francisco.

The conditions changed radically during the half hour or so during which I stopped on my way to Muir Woods to photograph the San Francisco skyline from above the Golden Gate Bridge. I was initially concerned that the morning would be too clear, since I am usually more interested in scenes with varied atmosphere. When I arrived it was mostly clear, though there was a bit of low fog out over the bay and some low clouds clustered above San Francisco, especially the downtown area where the tops of buildings were in the clouds.

I made a series of photographs of the skyline using my longest lens – others may appear here before long. This was one of the last ones I was able to make as the clouds thickened and eventually blocked my view completely. (What had started as a largely bright and clear early morning eventually evolved into a very foggy scene.)

This photograph is not in the public domain and may not be used on websites, blogs, or in other media without advance permission from G Dan Mitchell.

G Dan Mitchell Photography
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Clearing Fog, North Tower of the Golden Gate Bridge

Clearing Fog, North Tower of the Golden Gate Bridge
Clearing Fog, North Tower of the Golden Gate Bridge

Clearing Fog, North Tower of the Golden Gate Bridge. San Francisco, California. September 26, 2010. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

Morning fog clears from the North Tower of the Golden Gate Bridge, San Francisco, California.

Last week I made a quick trip north of San Francisco to photograph in the morning at Muir Woods National Monument in the Golden Gate National Recreation Area. My habit is to be on the road early enough to arrive at Muir Woods before the crowds arrive, and this almost always means that I cross the Golden Gate quite early in the morning, sometimes at dawn and sometimes a bit later. As I go across the bridge I keep my eyes open for special or unusual conditions – I no longer stop every time, but I do if the scene looks more interesting than usual.

This morning was unusual. It was extremely hot and dry inland, yet the offshore fog bank was making a valiant (and ultimately unsuccessful) effort to push its way through the Golden Gate past the bridge. The fog was not deep and it could only sustain itself where there was plenty of water or as it passed directly over the hills on either side of the entrance to the Bay. This meant that light was coming through the fog and it was intermittently coming and going along the edge of its incursion into the warmer air. So, I stopped.

This photograph looks back across a section of the bay that is fog covered and brightly back lit by the morning light, with the higher fog trying to push across the shoulder of the hills of the Marin headlands with the distant view of the San Francisco skyline beyond.

On a technical note, I used a 50mm prime lens for this photograph – the Canon EF 50mm f/1.4. I switched to the prime from my more typical zoom for several reasons. First, this composition seemed to work with the 50mm focal length. Second, this 50mm prime is a really excellent lens for landscape and similar work, providing outstanding resolution at the apertures typically used. Finally, I had the luxury of not having to work quickly – so I could rely on a prime with the “right” focal length rather than working with the zoom.

This photograph is not in the public domain and may not be used on websites, blogs, or in other media without advance permission from G Dan Mitchell.

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