From Tonight’s Dusk Shoot

Here’s a shot I took from the beach at dusk last night, right when the Burj Al Arab hotel’s beautiful exterior lighting came on (the hotel itself is the world’s tallest, at just over 1,050 feet tall).
For the first few minutes, they did a little light show (complete with white sweeping search lights on the heli-pad ), where it displayed a number of different solid colors on the front of the hotel (as shown below), but then for just a few moments it showed this multi-color look and I kept firing until it went away and returned to solid red for the next 15 to 20 minutes. By then it was getting so dark, I had to pack it in.
To me, the photos almost look like an illustration—-more like a 3D rendering rather than a photo, which is kind of weird, but I saw it with my own eyes, and well…that’s what it looked like. I included some of the other colors below, captured unretouched from Lightroom’s Library, so you can see what the other colors looked like.

The shot at top was taken with a Nikon D3, on a Gitzo Traveler tripod with a Really Right Stuff BH-40 ballhead. It was shot with a 70-200mm f/2.8 lens at 70mm (this entire trip I’ve had the wrong lens on my camera at the right time—I had to limp way, way, way down the beach to fill the hotel (the world’s tallest hotel) in the frame without clipping off the top or bottom).
GPS: I had the di-GPS unit for Nikon cameras attached to my camera, so it automatically embedded the GPS position info for where I took the shot into the file. To see a satellite photo of the exact spot where I took the shot you see above, click here.
There’s very little Photoshop work here, I just increased the contrast a little; I darkened the edges a bit, and added an Unsharp Mask. The exterior lighting was already so colorful, that I really couldn’t do too much. I have all of about 30-seconds in it.
NOTE: My brother Jeff and Jeff Revell were closer in shooting wide, but a security guard from the hotel went down almost immediately and stopped them from shooting because (in the security guard’s words), they did not have permission from the hotels PR dept. to shoot the hotel (this was only because they were using the most evil of photographic devices—a tripod). People were shooting the hotel all over the beach, and in the driveway, and a dozen other locations near them, but they were all hand-holding, so they were “OK.” Well, apparently I limped beyond the reach of hotel security, because they never came out to where I was shooting, and I got the shot you see above.












Hi Scott,
I really enjoyed these pictures but I was hoping that you could post them where we can really zoom in on them. (or hopefully you will talk about it on Photoshop user TV) I really appreciated the satellite info..good stuff as I am not in Florida and this seem to lend more depth to your pictorial essay and how you framed this picture.
Thanks again for all you do and continue best wishes for a speedy medical recovery.
Victor
I meant to say I am not on Dubai coastline..cheers
Nice shots.
You write that your brothers were stopped because “…they did not have permission from the hotels PR dept. to shoot the hotel…” Well kudos, at least that makes them some of the few security guards in the world that have been given a true reason. Usually they’re told it’s for National Security when in fact it’s the simple (but smart) reason of protecting intellectual property and potential revenue.
Scott amazing shot!! It looks so impressive.
Just a quick note on those terribly evil tripods, a friend of mine was taking some night-time shots in Seoul of a statue (Lee Sun Shin) over the weekend and he too was stopped by the police because of the tripod.
Again, many people were taking pictures with their hand-held cameras all around him.
What have these poor tripods done to deserve this ??
“Well, apparently I limped beyond the reach of hotel security, because they never came out to where I was shooting, and I got the shot you see above.”
Then maybe it was the right lens after all…
Excellent shot and the GPS link was interesting as well - I could just make out the security guards running along the beach from the satellite image. Which lens did you use for that one?
And just like Victor in the first comment, I’ve a feeling we’re not in Kansas any more.
Awesome Scott!
Hi Scott,
First, nice shot! However the comment about the wrong lens sparked an idea. Like many others out there I am new to the DSLR world and find that the learning curve is high; your books are helping with this of course. So my question is can you not do a book on lenses? I feel that the camera is only as good as the glass you have clicked on it. You can have the best camera in the world and still not get the shot if you have the wrong lens, as you pointed out. Or maybe you have a good suggestion of a book or site that already exists. I find it hard to know what to set my sites on next; it is a jungle out there and a reference book specific to the brand would surely help.
Just an idea, have a good trip.
Cheers
Kelly
cool shots!!!
I must say this is the finest image of the Burj I’ve seen… you should be able to trade a week or so with them… =o)
Scott,
I have a question about traveling with that evil tripod. Did you take it as carry-on? If so, did US TSA give you a hard time?
The tripod is a universal issue. You can’t shoot the monuments in DC using a tripod without a permit. The park police will look the other way if you are there when there a few people, such as very early in the AM.
I spent a year in Abu Dhabi when I was in the Military. Made numerous trips to Dubai. There’s much to photograph there. I managed a tour of the Burj Al Arab. It is absolutely amazing. We got to go out on the helipad, and the big bar/restuarant up top is fantastic. Oh, and the rooms. It had wireless internet before most of us knew what it was.
I’ve been in Hard Rock Cafes all around the world. The one in Dubai is a stand out compared to most. Enjoy……
These are beautiful shots, Scott. I bet a HDR comp of this would be mind blowing.
Simply WOW!
That is an amazing place to be for photography. That GPS thing, that is really interesting and thank you for sharing. I really enjoyed seiing that.
Just wondering, did you edit the shot after? I know the answer but I’m more interested on what you did, that is if you did edit them.
Cheers,
Gilles
As others have said, amazing images!
There seems to be something not quite right, however….your position as captured on the satellite photo would place the hotel’s access road on the left side of the image, but in the image the road is to the right of the hotel.
GPS malfunction?
Google glitch?
I’m an idiot?
Help me figure this out…
Nevermind, Scott….I am indeed an idiot.
Looked at the satellite photo again, and I zoomed out this time.
Apologies, dude!
(going back to bed now….)
GPS - I know I won’t be handing over $300 bucks to an anonymous website via the equally mysterious Paypal. That’s OK for you millionaires.
This travel bug has hit me to.
I am going to a photcruise starting Tuesday.
http://kblawson.wordpress.com/
All are invited to go via photos and my new blog. My first post is “throw momma off the boatâ€. Yea, that right, my 90 year old mom and me are going to panama canal for 10 days. As she refers to me; her 732 month old son, “kennyboyâ€.
Why Panama canal? You gotta know my mom. So I hope to post from the ship as often as possible
Mosquitoes and all
Ken
Great pictures and I’m pleased you’re enjoying Dubai. We moved here 2 years ago from Mississauga and are loving it, except I had to leave the Mississauga Camera Club behind.
Are you planning on seeing the flamingos, the 3rd largest mosque in the world [holds 14,000 people], Jebel Hafeet, the Al Ain Palace, Ibn Battuta Mall, etc., etc.?
ut
What a beautiful place and great shots. It must be incredible to be there to see it in person.
Beautiful image. Did you meter for the sky or did you use matrix metering?
Cool shot here Scott…interesting read on the “PR dept” reason though - ostensibly to protect their intellectual property and ability to market the design of the structure as unique. So…in a way that makes sense. Kind of neat you “snuck” by though…in a sense. Granted it does seem rather arbitrary how security approaches some individuals and not others, but from a different tack, I can kind of understand the argument of intellectual property and the potential of lost revenue in mis-marketing. The equivalent would be someone mistakenly reading the 7 Points book in a B&N and when it was time to go, forgot what they were doing and put the book in their bag. They get stopped, told not to do that. All the while, someone else sees an opportunity to sneak past security with their own copy of 7 points….interesting question raised here.
On a lighter note, it is kind of ironic that someone from your party (and you were speaking at the [b]photography[/b] show) got stopped from taking [b]photos[/b]!
Heard a rumor that it can easily cost $10,000 per night at Burj Al Arab.
Google images and video for some impressive shots of Andre Agassi and Roger Federer playing tennis on the helipad.
Scott, you should definitely try to get a helicopter tour of Dubai.
An Aerial shoot…of the Palm tree Islands and the World map private islands would be nice.
I was really hoping it was an April Fool’s – exploding cast
cheers – enjoy!
scott
Hi Scott, another excelent photo to add to your collection! Would you mind posting the settings you used for this shot.
Scott, welcome to my world. I live in Jordan and take photographs throughout the Middle East. I like to think that I have perfected the art of “guerrilla photography”. Security guards and police throughout the region are so suspicious of anyone with a professional looking camera, and if you bring out the tripod, they will swarm on you like a pack of flies. They’ve been instructed to tell you that taking photographs of [insert everyday object or location here] is ‘mamnua’ (forbidden), although when you ask them why, they really can’t give a reason.
It looks like you’re staying at the beautiful Jumeira Beach Hotel. It’s a great location and one of the best for shooting the Burj al-Arab.
That’s a killer shot Scott. What in incredible building!
I’ve had my photography run in’s with happy sec guards too. It’s comforting to know that as long as your not on private property they can’t stop us from shooting… Gavin