Summary
This post explores how I created a bold black-and-white image of St. Johns Bridge in Portland during harsh midday light. I share why shooting at noon is often avoided and how I used the bridge’s structure, shadows, and symmetry to turn a challenging lighting situation into an expressive piece of art.

For most landscape photographers, shooting at noon is taboo. We’re told to chase golden hour, avoid the overhead sun, and wait for soft light. And usually… that’s good advice.
But sometimes, rules are meant to be broken, if you know how to break them right.
This photograph of St. Johns Bridge in Portland was taken around midday, when shadows are typically harsh and unkind. But rather than shy away, I leaned in. I saw something different. I saw a canvas.
Using the Bridge as a Canvas
The massive concrete arches of the bridge created a stark, textured surface, almost like brutalist brushstrokes in stone. And the sun? It became my spotlight.
I waited for the right moment when steel truss shadows fell across the inner archways in perfect angles. What might have been considered bad light turned into a tool of contrast — a way to draw bold lines of shadow across stone.
The Geometry of Light and Form
There’s a beautiful symmetry to this structure – repeating triangles and archways that seem to echo into infinity. That symmetry, combined with the light, made it feel not like a bridge, but a cathedral of lines.
The hardness of the concrete, the precision of the geometry, and the raw texture all worked together to hold the drama of the light. There’s tension in this frame – between the fixed and the fleeting.
Photography isn’t always about waiting for the perfect conditions. Sometimes it’s about seeing what others overlook. Making the hard light work for you. Drawing with shadows. Framing chaos into symmetry.
