
- Center of the Universe
- one orange evening
- pac man cloud
- Thin steel grid between me and death
- Soon they will be gone
- Tasty Volkswagen
- Aurora Bridge
Aurora Bridge, 167 feet above the water level of Lake Union. Officially called the George Washington Memorial Bridge, it opened on George Washington's 200th birthday in 1932. Between its construction and 2011, when 8-foot fences were added on either side of the pedestrian walkways, there were 230 known suicides here, a grim record exceeded only by the Golden Gate Bridge. Photographed from the east walkway of the Fremont Bridge. - We Got This, Moon
- #WeGotThisSeattle
Seattle's Space Needle, closed to visitors since mid-march, added a flag reading "#WeGotThisSeattle", to bolster the city's spirit during the Covid-19 pandemic. The flag is tattered due to a sudden intense hail storm on the afternoon of March 31. - Discovery Park
From the south beach trail. - Maple Canopy
Bigleaf Maples at Discovery Park, Seattle - Bleitz Funeral Home
Site of Kurt Cobain's cremation, this funeral home has been shut down and will be demolished. - Fremont Bridge, Aurora Bridge
- Alps Hotel
- Remembering Donnie Chin
Donnie Chin, hero of the International District, was murdered July 2015. His shop, Sun May, remains decorated in his honour. - Man lives in the sunlit world of what he believes to be reality.
Infrared - New Richmond Hotel
- Eastern Hotel
- Rainier Tower From Not Very Far Away
- Shining Train
Seattle Monorail passing through EMP Museum tunnel - West Seattle Brake Service
Family-owned since 1940, at same location since 1950. - From Jose Rizal Bridge
- Won't get trolled again
Fremont Troll, under the Aurora Bridge, Seattle. - Seal of Goon Dip
Milwaukee Hotel in Seattle, built by Goon Dip, 1911. - No Linen
- Northern Pacific Hotel Lobby
- Immovable and Movable
Aurora Bridge (background) and Fremont Bridge (foreground), the latter raised to permit a barge to pass underneath. - That's Some Ceiling
5th Avenue Theatre entryway, Seattle - Gas Works
Gas Works Park, Infrared. - Gas Works
Gas Works Park, Infrared. - Mount Constance Sunset
Sunset behind Mount Constance, from Myrtle Edwards Park, Seattle. Two-frame HDR, cropped from 300mm. - Psychic Barber
Rick's Barber Shop - "Psychic Barber", 4845 California Ave SW, West Seattle. Originally located a few blocks south, Rick's Barber Shop was in a storefront next to a psychic. The psychic had a large neon sign reading "Psychic", with her phone number below, and when Rick added a neon sign of his own he matched the font, color, and size of his neighbor's. Side by side, in adjacent windows, they looked like "Psychic Barber" from the street. Eventually the psychic's business failed, and she simply stopped paying rent and abandoned everything in the shop. The landlord gave Rick the sign, and he relocated it (minus the phone number) above his own, so it now read "Psychic Barber" in a single window. It became a West Seattle landmark, with reporters always eager to retell the story or ask Rick for his forecast on major sporting events. Last year he moved to a new building. The window was too small for the original Psychic and Barber signs, so he mounted those on an inside wall instead, but got some new neon - red, white, and blue - for the window. Still in business, Rick's Barber Shop is temporarily closed due to the virus. There's a paper sign in the window apologizing that he didn't see this coming. - The Pine Box (Beer Inside)
The Pine Box - a Capitol Hill bar located in an old mortuary - Ballard "Up" House
Edith Macefield refused a $1M offer for her house, when the entire block around her was to be razed for a large retail development. So they simply built around her. Popularly believed to be the inspiration for the Disney movie "Up". - Ballard "Up" House
Edith Macefield refused a $1M offer for her house, when the entire block around her was to be razed for a large retail development. So they simply built around her. Popularly believed to be the inspiration for the Disney movie "Up". - Ballard "Up" House
Edith Macefield refused a $1M offer for her house, when the entire block around her was to be razed for a large retail development. So they simply built around her. Popularly believed to be the inspiration for the Disney movie "Up".