
Malaga Cathedral Tower - Golden Hour Architecture Photography
The Malaga Cathedral rises against a clear Andalusian sky, its single completed tower catching warm gold light at the end of the day. Built between 1528 and 1782, the Renaissance cathedral was meant to carry two matching towers, but the south tower was left a stump when funds ran out — local legend holds the money went instead to support the American Revolution. The unfinished form earned the building its affectionate nickname, La Manquita, "the little one-armed lady." Golden-hour light rakes across the stone, deepening the carved facade against the flat blue behind it. A photograph of a landmark defined, fondly, by what it lacks.
About this print
Each print is produced in a small, signed edition. Sizes range from 12×16 in to 30×40 in across nine formats — pick the one that fits your wall, not the one closest to standard. Custom sizes available on request: write to me.
Materials & Care
Fine Art Print — archival 308 gsm cotton rag, pigment inks, 100+ year display life. Frame behind glass or float-mount.
Canvas — gallery-wrap on a 1.5 in poplar stretcher, satin laminate, ready to hang.
Framed — fine art print, mounted, matted, and framed in a thin black or natural wood profile under museum glass.
Metal — image infused into brushed aluminum, float-mounted with a hidden bracket.
Acrylic — face-mounted under 4 mm acrylic, polished edges, hung with a recessed cleat.
Dust with a soft dry cloth. Keep out of direct sunlight to preserve the inks.
Shipping & returns
Prints ship from the studio within 5–7 business days, made to order. Worldwide tracked shipping. Each print is rolled in an archival tube (or crated for framed/glass/metal/acrylic).
If a print arrives damaged, send a photo within 7 days of delivery and I'll replace it. Because every print is made to order, returns for change-of-mind aren't accepted — but if you're not sure about size or material, write to me before ordering and I'll help you pick.
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