350 years of architectural history layered against gleaming glass towers. St Paul's Cathedral. The Shard. Tower Bridge. London is one of the world's great photography cities โ and it rewards the photographer who arrives early, stays late, and works every angle. Here's how I shoot it.
London is a city that compresses centuries into a single view. From the right position you can frame St Paul's Cathedral โ completed in 1710 โ against The Shard's glass spire completed in 2012. The old Roman wall meets the Walkie Talkie's curved glass. The Thames connects them all. For a photographer, this layering of history and modernity creates compositional opportunities that few cities can match.
London's weather โ so often cursed by locals โ is a photographer's secret weapon. Overcast skies act as a natural softbox, eliminating harsh shadows on architecture. A sudden dramatic sky after rain turns ordinary scenes extraordinary. And the light quality on a rare crisp, clear London morning is something genuinely special.
Wren's masterpiece dominates the City of London skyline and rewards every angle. The 70-200mm G at around 135mm from the Millennium Bridge delivers the classic compressed dome-against-sky composition. The morning eastern light catches the Portland stone with a warmth that the afternoon's flat western light can't replicate. Allow time to work the full circumference โ each angle tells a different story.
The angular glass facade of One New Change โ directly east of St Paul's โ creates a natural mirror that reflects the cathedral's dome in fragmented geometric panels. Walk along the building's eastern face and compose so St Paul's appears centred between the two glass walls, the reflection doubling the dome in perfect symmetry. This is a 14mm GM shot โ you need the width to capture both walls and the cathedral simultaneously.
The memorial garden on the north side of the cathedral contains a perfect circular black reflection pool โ one of London's most underused photography spots. The still water mirrors the dome and surrounding trees with extraordinary clarity on calm mornings. At golden hour the warm stone reflects a deep amber in the black water. The 14mm GM at minimum focus distance gets you ground level with the pool edge for maximum reflection drama.
The cathedral's floodlighting system gives the Portland stone a rich warm glow against a deep blue evening sky. The blue hour window โ 20โ30 minutes after sunset โ balances the artificial and natural light beautifully. From the south bank of the Thames with the 70-200mm G at around 100mm, the illuminated dome floats above the surrounding darkened buildings in a way that no daylight shot can achieve.
Tower Bridge's Victorian Gothic towers illuminate beautifully after dark. The view from the north bank just west of the bridge frames HMS Belfast in the foreground with both towers and their connecting walkway perfectly symmetrical behind. The 70-200mm G at 100mm compresses the perspective just enough to make the composition feel intentional rather than snapshot. Long exposures of 15โ20 seconds smooth the Thames into glass and multiply the light reflections.
The Shard's asymmetric glass spire catches and refracts light in ways that change minute by minute during golden hour. I shoot it with the Sony 70-200mm G from varying distances to control how much of the surrounding context appears โ close for an abstract glass study, further back to include the historic church domes in the foreground at Southwark. The framing-through-an-aperture composition I captured uses the building gap on Tooley Street to isolate the spire in a natural frame.
20 Fenchurch Street โ the Walkie Talkie โ is best photographed from the narrow lanes around Lime Street and Leadenhall. The Tamron 17-28mm f/2.8 is ideal here โ wide enough to capture the full building from close quarters while the surrounding Victorian architecture provides a rich foreground. The dramatic upward perspective, slightly off-centre, emphasises the building's curved profile and the contrast between centuries of architecture compressed into a single view.
If London is on the itinerary, Paris is a 2h15m Eurostar ride from St Pancras. The Louvre Pyramid at dusk โ with its glass and steel geometry silhouetted against a pink sky โ is one of the cleanest architectural shots in Europe. The Sony 14mm GM from ground level looking up along the pyramid's edge creates a strong diagonal against the fading sky. Arrive 30 minutes before official sunset for the richest colour.
Browse the complete London gallery โ St Paul's from four angles, Tower Bridge, The Shard, the streets of the City, and a Paris detour.
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