Simplejoy and Brian,
Thanks.
Serendipity plays a role in a lot of photography.
This was not a "scene" that could be seen in any sense when and where I shot it. I couldn't see it because it didn't exist at all other than on the focusing screen of the camera. And only then if the camera were pointed or tilted "just so." I didn't plan it or have any opportunity to.
I was concentrating on getting shots of the wrought iron gate. I took 10 in all. I really didn't try to get the "bokeh balls" into any particular composition, because they weren't evident during the shooting. They are out of focus lights from store windows and signs very far down the street from the old gate and its textured, painted surface - which is all I was trying to capture.
I really didn't notice the lights while I was shooting. The slightest shift in the camera's position wildly changed their position, relationship to each other and intensity and saturation as their geometry and perspective was splayed all around the focusing screen by the 180mm lens at its closest focus. In some of the shots, they're not in the frame at all, although the foreground objects are hardly changed in position. In others, they are pale and uninteresting.
Lucky shot. Hey, when yer good, yer good!
Rich