From the northern end of Marshall's Beach — past the signs that suggest you stop — the south tower of the Golden Gate fills the

Golden Gate Bridge — Postcard Style II

From the northern end of Marshall's Beach — past the signs that suggest you stop — the south tower of the Golden Gate fills the right third of the frame. The Pacific is the foreground: textured, moving, indifferent to the structure behind it. The bridge's International Orange pulls against the teal-and-blue of water and sky, a combination that should feel predictable and somehow never does.

Fort Point sits at the base of the south tower, a 19th-century fort dwarfed by the 20th-century bridge it predates. Most photographs of the bridge erase this detail. From Marshall's Beach, at certain angles, it's visible — a reminder that this stretch of water has been defended, crossed, and watched for a long time. The Marin Headlands form the background, their green slopes softening the steel geometry above them.

This is the postcard view, and that's not an apology — it's an acknowledgment. The Golden Gate Bridge earns its iconography every morning, in every light, across every season. As America marks 250 years, it seemed right to make the straightforward image and let the subject carry its own weight. It has never needed help with that.

https://d38zjy0x98992m.cloudfront.net/019f2a05-56bf-787a-9a83-b6ddbea000e6/P0006663-6668_Panorama-1_1_2_Photodeck_Full_Rez_Export_golden-gate-postcard-horizontal_uxga.jpghttps://www.hammondraffetto.art/it/media/019f2a05-56bf-787a-9a83-b6ddbea000e6/pricehttps://www.hammondraffetto.art/it/media/019f2a05-56bf-787a-9a83-b6ddbea000e6/price

From the northern end of Marshall's Beach — past the signs that suggest you stop — the south tower of the Golden Gate fills the right third of the frame. The Pacific is the foreground: textured, moving, indifferent to the structure behind it. The bridge's International Orange pulls against the teal-and-blue of water and sky, a combination that should feel predictable and somehow never does.

Fort Point sits at the base of the south tower, a 19th-century fort dwarfed by the 20th-century bridge it predates. Most photographs of the bridge erase this detail. From Marshall's Beach, at certain angles, it's visible — a reminder that this stretch of water has been defended, crossed, and watched for a long time. The Marin Headlands form the background, their green slopes softening the steel geometry above them.

This is the postcard view, and that's not an apology — it's an acknowledgment. The Golden Gate Bridge earns its iconography every morning, in every light, across every season. As America marks 250 years, it seemed right to make the straightforward image and let the subject carry its own weight. It has never needed help with that.