13 favorites     20 comments    174 visits

1/125 f/11.0 10.4 mm ISO 200

SONY DSC-RX100M2

EXIF - See more details

See also...

Détails Architecturaux Détails Architecturaux


Where in the World? Where in the World?


Tolerance Tolerance


Street Live! Street Live!


Flickr Refugees Flickr Refugees


Downtown Toronto Downtown Toronto


Toronto Toronto


People People


See more...

Keywords

canada
toronto
ontario
university avenue
king street west


Authorizations, license

Visible by: Everyone
All rights reserved

174 visits


2016

2016
King & University, Toronto, 2016.

I think the large view is more interesting, but you be the judge -- type Z. If you feel like it. It's not like an order, eh?

Ruebenkraut, kiiti, Beatrice Degan(MARS), Marie-claire Gallet and 9 other people have particularly liked this photo


20 comments - The latest ones
 William Sutherland
William Sutherland club
Marvelous shot! Stay well!

Admired in:
www.ipernity.com/group/tolerance
2 years ago.
John FitzGerald club has replied to William Sutherland club
Thanks, William.
2 years ago.
 Jaap van 't Veen
Jaap van 't Veen club
Nice cityscape.
2 years ago.
John FitzGerald club has replied to Jaap van 't Veen club
Thanks, Jaap.
2 years ago.
 Ulrich John
Ulrich John club
Impressive from your POV, John !
2 years ago.
John FitzGerald club has replied to Ulrich John club
Thanks, Ulrich. I think I was sitting on a planter having lunch, as so many people do there (both sit on planters and have lunch).
2 years ago.
 David Slater (Spoddendale)
David Slater (Spodde… club
I rather like that shot John. Reflections put to good use.
2 years ago.
John FitzGerald club has replied to David Slater (Spodde… club
Thanks, David. The building I was sitting in front of is almost a mirror image of the one on the left, so the corner can get quite interesting.
2 years ago.
 tiabunna
tiabunna club
An impressive cityscape.
2 years ago.
John FitzGerald club has replied to tiabunna club
Thanks, George. I've been watching a lot of Australian TV over the past year, and Toronto seems to be like a backward version of Melbourne and Sydney.
2 years ago.
 Fred Fouarge
Fred Fouarge club
Mooie goeie Foto
2 years ago.
John FitzGerald club has replied to Fred Fouarge club
Thanks, Fred.
2 years ago.
 Steve Bucknell
Steve Bucknell club
Impressive, cinematic shot
2 years ago.
John FitzGerald club has replied to Steve Bucknell club
Thanks, Steve.
2 years ago.
 Steve Bucknell
Steve Bucknell club
Impressive.
2 years ago.
 Leon_Vienna
Leon_Vienna club
Where does mankind get all that glass from??
150 years ago, it was the most valuable when building a house - windows of the size of a newspaper page were usual at least in farmhouses on the countryside.
And how do we get rid off all that again? Later.
But your upward view is quite impressive, and having that two persons "disturbing" it, just makes it more fascinating.
2 years ago.
John FitzGerald club has replied to Leon_Vienna club
Thanks, Leon. A few years ago there were so many glass buildings going up in Toronto that much of the glass that was received was defective and started flying off the buildings. I've never understoof the mania for glass here. "Cold winters, hot summers?...Glass, that's the ticket". An advantage for photographers, though, is that for much of the day the streets have two sunny sides.
2 years ago.
 Beatrice Degan(MARS)
Beatrice Degan(MARS)
Why couldn't I have immediately enlarged such a vision of city life in Toronto where I had the lucky chance to be 10 years ago anyway! :-)
Impressive point of view and realization.
Great, by now huge glass buildings reign everywhere.
I didnt know about about these incidents !!
At least..they are not cubes or concrete parallelepids:-)
2 years ago.
John FitzGerald club has replied to Beatrice Degan(MARS)
It took me 46 years in Toronto to discover this opportunity, Bea, and a few years of starting my daily walk at this corner a couple of times a week. I am only slowly learning how to photograph where I live now.

I gather one of the reasons Toronto's buildings are far less ornate than the buildings here in the nineteenth century is that ice kept pulling a lot of the stone detail off onto the streets. Falling glass is much better -- you have a chance to see it coming, for a start.
2 years ago.

Sign-in to write a comment.