Anthony's Home Page Log in

Contents  


Introduction  


Galleries  
Portfolio  
Paris  
Videos  
Street Scenes  
Art Gallery  
Wallpapers  


Downloads  
Simple Software  
Documents  
ESL Materials  


FAQs  
Paris Blog  
Flight Blog  
Web Secrity  
Site Photography  
City of Paris  
Eiffel Tower  
Notre-Dame  
The Reliabe PC  
Paris Fast Food  
My Site  


Reviews  
Books  
Movies  


Miscellaneous  
Guest Book  
Feedback  
Terms of Use  
Privacy Policy  
About  

Friday
17 April 2026
01:35:17 CEST

Champs-Élysées in Daylight


first      previous      next      last     

This is a picture of the avenue des Champs-Élysées in daylight. This photo was taken from the same point as my main photograph, but with a different camera and a much longer lens.

The large white arch in the distance is the Arc de Triomphe (the same structure that you see illuminated in my nighttime photo). It seems smaller here than in the nighttime photo because I used a shorter lens for this photo; as it is, it looks even more distant in real life, since it is about a kilometer away. The Arc is on a low hill, so you can’t really see anything behind it from this point on the avenue; beyond it, though, is the avenue de la Grande Armée and La Défense, the very chic, very modern business suburb just outside the Paris city limit; the suburb is aligned precisely with the axis of the Champs-Élysées.

The large trees on either side of the avenue conceal the many buildings and the very wide sidewalks crowded with people (mostly tourists) that run up either side of the street.

This picture was taken on a very clear morning in July. The complete ensemble of La Défense, the trendy suburb of Neuilly, the avenue de la Grande Armée, the Champs-Élysées, the Place de la Concorde, the Tuileries Gardens, and the Louvre (the last three of these are behind the camera in this photo) were visible in person, although only the main drag of the Champs-Élysées is visible here. The flags are from the Bastille Day celebrations on July 14.

The rise in the avenue towards the Arc de Triomphe is not an illusion. The avenue rises towards the Arc, then descends again slightly beyond it, only to rise again at La Défense.

Photographed on July 17, 2008.

Terms of usePrivacy • Page updated April 16, 2026