
- Seattle Can be Saved... by Steam!
Seattle Underground Tour - Orbs before Needle
Holiday "tree" of lighted orbs, in the center of the circular parking area next to the Space Needle. The underside of the Space Needle's top section is concealed by construction scaffolding, during its 2017-2018 "Spacelift". - Park here for the night
Container ship in Puget Sound - Leinenkugels
- over rainier
- Your Sky is Winter Fire
- Alaska 737
Alaska Airlines N320AS, a Boeing 737-990, northbound from Sea-Tac at sunset. - Sun Dogs over Puget Sound
- Angels Above
- Look Out, Look Down
The Space Needle's new glass floor provides a skyline view that you can walk into. - 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. - Angels Above
- The Pine Box (Beer Inside)
The Pine Box - a Capitol Hill bar located in an old mortuary - Hotel Theodore
Formerly Roosevelt Hotel, built 1930 - My heart burns there too
- Rush Hour (December)
- A One-Hour Tour
- A Bridge to Fremont
- Cranebird
Osprey on a construction crane in Seattle - Rainbow Sherbet (Seattle)
- Ray's on the water
Ray's Boathouse restaurant, with neon sign from 1952. Destroyed by fire in 1987, then rebuilt. - Duck, Duck, Goose.
Roasted waterfowl suspended in a shop window, Chinatown, Seattle. - I am Seattle (Magenta)
Space Needle lit up in the T-Mobile brand colour for the year-end fireworks (December 2016) - Things that are white
- Gas Works
Gas Works Park, Infrared. - Gas Works
Gas Works Park, Infrared. - Aplomado falcon
- Ark Lodge Cinema
Ark Lodge #126, Columbia City, Seattle; John L. McCauley, 1921. The facade is neoclassical, with four Ionic pilasters. At the top of the pediment, here obscured by the tree, is a Masonic square and compass, still intact. Below it, the lettering reads "Ark Lodge 126 F.& A.M.", or "Free and Accepted Masons". Seattle architect John L. McCauley (1879-1957), himself a Freemason, designed and built this meeting space in 1920-21 for the Ark Lodge #126 chapter. The upper story served as the Masons' assembly space, while the ground floor provided income for the chapter as retail spaces. From 1921 until the 1940s, the ground floor was occupied by the Heater Glove Factory, which made leather gloves and helmets; Charles Lindbergh wore a Heater helmet on his transatlantic flight. The Masons continued to meet here until 2002, when they sold the building, and it was converted to a cinema. The marquee was added and the second-floor assembly hall became a 204-seat auditorium. After additional remodeling, the building now contains four theatres. arklodgecinemas.com/ - MSC Nerissa in the Port of Seattle
- Shilshole
- Apl Le Havre, Singapore
- Some Boats
- Port of Seattle
- Containers
- Mount Constance Sunset
Sunset behind Mount Constance, from Myrtle Edwards Park, Seattle. Two-frame HDR, cropped from 300mm. - Mister Crowley
- Guild 45th
- Seaspan Dalian, Hong Kong
- Seattle Lighting
- Chinatown
Lensbaby Composer with Sweet 50 optic. - Seaspan Dalian, Port of Seattle
- Super Blood Wolf Moon 2019
- Frank Poole Goes Forth
- Tai Tung Chop Suey
- SSA Terminals
- Arctic Club Dome
Northern Lights Dome Ballroom, Arctic Club Building, Seattle, 1916. - Shanty Tavern
- That's Some Ceiling
5th Avenue Theatre entryway, Seattle - Friday the 13th
Jason Voorhees mask, original film prop, at Museum of Pop Culture, Seattle - Courage.
Original "Cowardly Lion" costume at the Museum of Pop Culture, Seattle, supplemented with a mask modeled on the features of Bert Lahr.