Category Archives: Los Angeles

How to photograph the Crystal Cathedral in LA

If you love architecture photography, the Crystal Cathedral is a godsend.

Reverent Robert Schuller built a giant edifice of glass and white steel to worship the simple carpenter. Schuller, a PR talent, understood how to draw worldwide attention. Enlisting celebrities and organizing media spectacles par excellence, his congregation now extends beyond the US borders.
Inside the Crystal Cathedral

How to photograph Huntington Beach Pier

As the official title “Surf City USA” states, Huntington Beach is the self-proclaimed surfing capital of the United States. The most photogenic landmark in Huntington Beach is, without a doubt, the Huntington Beach Pier. Stretching out into the vast Pacific Ocean from the intersection of Main St. and Pacific Coast Highway, the pier is the hub of beach life in Huntington Beach. And, as most people who have visited the long stretches of beaches in Southern California know, the addition of a pier actually adds some photographic interest to your pictures rather than just the long and endless drab blue green ocean stretching off for parts unknown.

Whether your interest is dramatic landscapes and sunsets, street photography, or action sports, you can usually find something of photographic interest at the Huntington Beach Pier.
Sunset at Huntington Pier

How to photograph Pasadena

Located in the San Gabriel Mountains, Pasadena is a suburb of Los Angeles with its own distinct flair that is in stark contrast to Los Angeles. The affluent community of large mansions, an old yet hip downtown and great outdoors attracts wealthy residents and visitors. The City of Roses is home to the Parade of Roses and the football game in the famous Rose Bowl arena. Residents take their rose gardens serious, keeping the rose theme alive and the city a vibrant colorful jewel.
Roses at Wrigley Mansion

How to photograph the Huntington Library and Gardens

The Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens (short: The Huntington) is the former estate of railroad tycoon Henry E. Huntington (1850-1927), who left this magnificent 150 acre pleasure garden as his legacy.

With an astounding amount of themed gardens, fantastic collections and the Mediterranean / Californian architecture of the library buildings, you will find many compelling motifs and room for unique compositions, despite the crowds exceeding one half million visitors each year.
Tree at the Huntington

How to photograph Los Angeles Chinatown

The kitschy colorful Los Angeles Chinatown is still home to hard working immigrant families, trying to carve out a living in a foreign land. They bring a piece of their culture, which is very different from the western world. Chinatown thus becomes a major attraction for photographers almost by definition. The vibrant colors, competing with each other, almost look unreal. The striking Chinese letters have the appeal of art décor beautifying the facades of most buildings.
Chinese Lanterns in Los Angeles' Chinatown

Los Angeles – El Pueblo and Union Station

Los Angeles’ historic district is located close to the founding site of El Pueblo de Los Angeles, where 44 Mexican people founded the city in 1781. Restored in the 1930ies and embraced by the Latino culture, El Pueblo struggles to retain its authenticity among the kitschy shops selling anything that looks Mexican enough to fetch tourist dollars. Then again, El Pueblo protects some of the oldest buildings in Los Angeles and Latino culture has always had a colorful flair.
Los Angeles Union Station

How to photograph the Getty Center

Resting on a stunning hilltop in the Santa Monica Mountains, the Getty Center overlooks the vast city landscape of greater Los Angeles. Its exceptional contemporary architecture, colorful gardens and sweeping views are the main attraction for photographers. Meier, the architect, built almost the entire complex with travertine stone. It exerts a sterile, futuristic flair upon visitors as if it jumped straight from a science fiction novel.

The intricate interplay of light and shadows, shapes and architecture provide near limitless compositions. Photographers can get lost in the possibilities and strain the understanding of fellow travelers. Each place seems to change its character throughout the course of the day, making it impossible for you to leave.
Getty Center Cafe

How to photograph Venice Beach and Canals

Venice Beach Boardwalk is the funkiest, hippest place in Los Angeles. Street vendors set up shops, interrupted only by street food shacks and street performers. Venice Beach is an assault on your senses. Music booms all around you while weird looking creatures and vendors compete for your attention.

Venice Beach exemplifies Los Angeles’ stereotypical mantra of seeing and being seen. People here are mostly out to enjoy themselves and each other. For street photographers, the bustling Ocean Front Walk is a heaven send. People here are either happy when you photograph them or don’t notice you at all.
Venice Beach Skaters

How to photograph the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library

The Ronald Reagan Presidential Library is a monument to one of the most influential Presidents in recent history. The beautiful California Mission style architecture of the complex overlooks Simi Valley from the top of a mountain.
Air Force One

How to photograph Walt Disney Concert Hall

Walt Disney Concert Hall is a futuristic monument and venue for the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra. Its distinctive shape seems to intertwine organic shapes with mechanical reflective steel to create a form that is synonymous for Los Angeles. The architecture is also an enjoyable highlight for photographers.
Facade of the Walt Disney Concert Hall

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