I had previously posted a shot of this building, Exterior modern architecture - mixed lighting and was really on my way to take another shot of the interior Interior architecture and only had my camera with a single lens, with the rest of my gear in the car (my daughter was in the car) when I saw this shot.
I really liked the way the building entrance and the tables were perfectly mirrored in the window and i really liked the angles that I saw.
This is the type of shot I should have removed my filter. Unfortunately, I had no place to put it, so I left it on.
It's a decent mid-range (Sigma) one and the lens I used (Nikkor f/3.5 24mm PC-E) has Nikon's "Nano coating" anti-reflection technology (only available on the high end lenses). The filter was fairly clean, but I got all kinds of reflection "artifacts". The worst ones were in the clouds and I de-emphasized them by adding a bit of gaussian blur to just the cloudy sky. Removing the filter would have done even more. There are still artifacts that can be seen, but they really don't take away from the shot (too much).
So for all the shooters out there that insist on having an clear protective filter on their lens, there are situations where removing them will result in an improved image. This would have been one of them...

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I like the geometric lines and reflections . Although I like the image as is ,IMO a square format would put the emphasis more on the reflections. Or I would try another shot with only reflections in a landscape format.
