Afternoon light illuminates the stunning multi-story window of New York's Grand Central Station.

Afternoon light enters Grand Central Terminal through the arched south windows and falls across the concourse in long diagonal shafts, catching the movement of commuters and the gold-painted constellations of the ceiling in the same breath. No tripod is permitted inside the terminal, which makes every image a negotiation between available light and the patience to wait for a composition to clear. The Leica M11 — a rangefinder camera as old in concept as photography itself — is ideally suited to exactly this kind of available-light architectural work, quiet and inconspicuous in a crowd. The terminal has been photographed ten thousand times; this image finds its own angle in the quality of the light.

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Grand Central