This week’s top photo comes from Visual Journalist Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere. Follow him on X, Bluesky, and Instagram.
What makes this photo great?
This spring marks the first time in two years that the cherry blossom trees outside the Griffin Museum of Science and Industry have bloomed in Chicago, and I knew I wanted to test my newly acquired drone piloting skills to capture the blossoms.
The dynamic lighting of this shot from the setting sun really pushes the colors around the Columbia Basin. The elements of the setting sun, dynamic sky, cherry blossom trees, and museum create a lot of layers in this image and make a treat for the eye.
How did you get the shot?
Tuesday was a quieter news day, with relatively calm weather, so I wanted to photograph the cherry blossom trees at “golden hour” — the hour or so before sunset. The sky had seen scattered clouds all day, and I knew from experience that sunset usually makes for some really dynamic light and colors.
While flying around getting photos of different angles of the cherry blossoms, I found this angle that had all the elements I was looking for: the sky, the cherry blossoms, a pathway the light could fall across the trees, and the museum.
Carefully getting my drone to where I was happy with the composition was a waiting game. I was banking on the clouds creating some dynamic lighting, but they didn’t initially cooperate, blanketing the area with too much light diffusion.
I held my altitude at about 55 feet from the ground, about 4-5 feet from a tree, and waited. Slowly, I watched my drone’s battery life indicator tick down, while making tiny adjustments to prevent it from colliding with the tree.
Eventually, with mere minutes left before I’d have to change out the batteries, the sun poked out from the clouds and blanketed the area with golden rays.
Technical details:
- Equipment: DJI Mavic 3 Pro
- Focal length: 12.3 mm
- Aperture: f/3.2
- Exposure: 1/200
- ISO: 400
25 more great photos from the Sun-Times photo staff:
(From left) Ben Montes, 37, of Highland, Indiana, dresses as as Loki; Gina Mazzone, 33, of Ukrainian Village, and Milan Saunders, 33, of Auburn Gresham, dress as Lest and Mel Medarda, respectively, from the game “League of Legends;” and Nia Clark, 22, of Naperville, dresses as Ladypool at the Chicago Comic and Entertainment Expo, known as C2E2 at McCormick Place, Saturday, April 12, 2025.
Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times
Janice Flemister hugs a supporter at a vigil for her brother, John Flemister, a beloved doorman, near the site of his death at the UIC-Halsted Blue Line Station, Monday, April 14, 2025. John Flemister, 61, worked the front desk at several area residential buildings and was heading home after work Saturday when he was shot and killed.
Zubaer Khan/Sun-Times
A rat eats garbage in an alley near West Birchwood and North Greenview avenues in Rogers Park on the North Side, Friday, April 11, 2025. For 10 years in a row, Chicago has been deemed “America’s rattiest city” by Orkin Pest Control. Birth control is one of the latest choices for tamping down rodent populations, and it’s one of the more humane choices.
Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times
The Breakfast Club actors (from left) Judd Nelson, Molly Ringwald, Ally Sheedy, Emilio Estevez and Anthony Michael Hall participate in a 40th Anniversary Reunion panel discussion at the Chicago Comic and Entertainment Expo, known as C2E2, at McCormick Place, Saturday, April 12, 2025.
Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times