Welcome to my bridges of the Swan River Gallery.

Bridges can be stubborn subjects. To turn them into something more than engineering, you need still water, no current, and plenty of reflections. I’ve returned to the same spot again and again, searching for the one shot I can improve—because with long exposures and changing light you often get only one true chance.

The key is composition that honors both structure and atmosphere: frame the span to emphasize lines and symmetry, use reflections to double the geometry, and let long exposures soften water into glass so the bridge seems to float.

Timing matters. Pre-dawn or the blue hour after sunset gives balanced light and deeper reflections; a calm evening after a windless day produces the mirror surface you need. Bring a sturdy tripod, neutral-density filters to allow multi-second to minute-long exposures in brighter conditions, and a low ISO to keep detail clean. Scout the bank for low vantage points to maximize reflection and include subtle foreground elements—rocks, reeds, or a faint shoreline—to anchor the scene.

I keep returning not out of frustration but because each visit reveals something new: different cloud movement, a tint of light, or a subtle shift in perspective that transforms the bridge from a utilitarian object into a quiet monument. Here in this gallery are those attempts—moments when patience, still water, and reflection converged to make the ordinary feel a little extraordinary.

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Attadale

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East Fremantle/Bicton