I’ve been working mostly in black and white street photography, where the frame often depends more on weight, shadow, and timing than on clean description.
In this image, I let the blacks get quite heavy because I wanted the figure and the surrounding space to feel slightly hostile, not neatly readable. I’m never fully sure where that line sits: when does contrast become atmosphere, and when does it simply start eating the photograph?
Shot in harsh available light, edited with the shadows left deliberately dense rather than rescued.
Would you pull more detail back from the black areas, or does the loss of information help the image?

Thanks, that’s a very sharp observation. You’re right: the dark areas are doing what I wanted, but the upper part may be too restrained. There was plenty of light, but I probably held it back too much to avoid turning the image into a clean, heroic city postcard, because apparently I enjoy making life harder for myself.
I’ll try a version with more brightness and contrast in the upper buildings and sky reflections, especially since the car windows are already suggesting that stronger light. It may give the frame more tension without losing the weight in the shadows. Good catch.