Thanks to the geography of the areas surrounding Toronto, ours is a city that boasts striking views from over 50 kilometres away in multiple directions. The iconic CN Tower-anchored skyline can be viewed from various points across Lake Ontario but also the Niagara Escarpment to the northwest.
It's tough to pick a favourite angle, though it's worth noting that the view from Grimsby offers a rather remarkable example of the Earth's curvature, where the bottom half of the Rogers Centre exists out of view (if you climb up the escarpment, it mostly comes back).
Naturally the type of lens one uses to capture the distant skyline determines the perspective it's shown in. Telephoto lenses visually compress space, so with a little foreground and a central object that's far away, one can create the illusion that Toronto is much closer than it really is.
But really the key to all of these photos, whether zoomed in or out, is the CN Tower. Naturally it's the most recognizable structure in any skyline photo of Toronto, but when one is shooting from 50+ kilometres away, the unmistakable shape of the Tower never fails to pull the photo together by proving a focal point. In the absence of this landmark, we'd hardly know what we were looking at.
PHOTOS
Toronto from the Niagara Escarpment near St. Catharines.
Toronto from from Caledon by Iain Bell.
Toronto from Vineland by Derek Flack.
Toronto from Caledon by John Church.
Toronto from Grimbsy by ethervizion.
Toronto from Grimbsy (closer view) by Stephen Hutchinson.
Lead photo of Toronto from Beamsville by Karen Maraj.
by Derek Flack via blogTO
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