
- Keep your eye upon the doughnut, and not upon the hole.
"Black Sun" sculpture, Volunteer Park, Seattle. - The pointed end
Spadix of a corpse flower, Amorphophallus titanum. - Behind dark cloud
- Moon over Seattle
- The Parliament of Trees
- Low Visibility at 520 Feet
- Seattle Neon Book!
New book of my neon photos - over 450 of them. Buy it here: Seattle Neon on Kickstarter - Awe
- General from another time
Terra Cotta Warriors of the First Emperor of China, ca. 2200 BC - Roadhouse
Twin Peaks' Fall City Roadhouse. - Archer
Terra Cotta Warriors of the First Emperor of China, ca. 2200 BC - the night
- Eagle Peak
Infrared, converted to B&W - Stevens Peak
Stevens Peak, viewed from opposite side of Stevens Canyon, Mount Rainier National Park. A ridge connected to Unicorn Peak is in the foreground. - I'm just a boy, standing in front of a corpseflower, asking it to open for me.
Corpseflower (Amorphophallus Titanum, which means "big misshapen dick"), not yet in bloom, Seattle Volunteer Park - Dark Snoqualmie
- Departure
- Can't a guy just eat his fish?
- You crows get off my crane!
- Christine Falls
Lower tier of Christine Falls, a 37-foot drop, at Mount Rainier National Park. Named for Christine Louise Van Trump (1880-1907), daughter of Rainier explorer Philemon Van Trump. - Artificial Eclipse
- Lighthouse of Warren Place
Lighthouse at the Felix Building, Warren Place, Seattle - Keep Hope Alive
Graffiti tribute to local hip-hop master Soul One, who died March 2019. Painted March 2019, demolished August 2019. Warren Place, Belltown - Nisqually-Paradise Road
- rainier fly agaric
Fly Agaric mushroom on Mount Rainier - Red Sun at Rainier
Smoke from the September 2017 Wildfires causes a thick haze - and red sun - over Stevens Canyon, Mount Rainier. This was a full hour before sunset, and the sun was a deep red. - Wonder Bread
Neon sign, 1952, from factory demolished in 2007, restored and placed atop the apartment building built on the former factory site. - Narada Falls
Narada Falls, Mount Rainier National Park - Settling in for the night
- Musician for the Afterlife
Terra cotta figure from the tomb of the first Chinese emperor, thought to be a musician due to his hand positions and lack of armour. Any instrument he carried has long since crumbled to dust. - Burgers!
- Mike's Chili Parlor
Ballard, Seattle, since 1922. - Day of Mourning
- Edgewater
Edgewater Hotel, built on a pier in 1962 for the World's Fair. The Beatles stayed here in August 1964. - Cafe Mecca
Bar in Lower Queen Anne, Seattle - Snoqualmie Falls on a July Evening
- Alki Spud
Alki Spud Fish & Chips, West Seattle. Brothers Jack and Frank Alger started selling fish and chips (ten cents for two pieces of ling cod and fries in a cardboard boat) out of their Alki Avenue garage in 1935, cutting a takeout window in the side of the building. During WWII, rationing made oil for frying difficult to obtain, and Spud nearly had to close, but neighbors banded together to donate their oil ration tickets, saving the fish and chip stand. After the war, Spud replaced the old garage with a modern building of a nautical design, including portholes. By 1961 they had replaced this with the current Googie-inspired building featuring an upswept roof. Spud has since expanded to other neighborhoods and cities around Seattle, but the Alki location is the original. - Never Again is Now
"Never Again is Now", mural on Seattle Betsuin Buddhist Temple, by Erin Shigaki. - Inversion
- Shilshole
- Jay, walking
Steller's Jay at Mount Rainier National Park - Box Canyon
Mount Rainier National Park. A stream from the glacier above wore a deep and narrow channel through the rock. - Hotel Theodore
Formerly Roosevelt Hotel, built 1930 - Westside Barber Shop
- Roosevelt Hotel