Port Melbourne Golden Hour ~ May
These shots were taken between 5:30 and 6:45 in the evening. Photographers call this the "Golden Hour" because of the great light quality produced by the sun filtered through clouds.
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Facing east after a passing downpour which created this interesting cloud formation and reflections in the puddles on the deck of the Princes Pier. There's a good lesson here. Many photographers will spend all their time facing west in hope of capturing a great shot, thus sometimes completely missing what is going on behind them.
Princes Pier is a 580 metre long historic pier on Port Phillip Bay, in Port Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. It was known as the New Railway Pier until renamed Prince's Pier after the Prince of Wales who visited Melbourne in May 1920. Over many decades, this pier has played a critical role in commerce, wartime embarkation and migration. With the advent of modern commercial air travel, arrivals to Princes Pier gradually declined from the 1970s. Closed in 1989, Princes Pier had been disused until its recent refurbishment. The redeveloped Princes Pier was launched as a public space in December 2011.
So many photographers have taken this shot, but I couldn't resist. These pylons once formed the foundation for the Princes Pier. The deck has been removed and only the first 1/3rd restore. I was in a rush to get this shot as the sun was just about to sink below the horizon, the the last touch of colour disappeared from this pylons and ladder rails. Make sure you enlarge this shot to full screen size. You will note rain drops have beaded to the chrome hand rails.