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- Marco Polo Saloon
- Bradlee Distributors
- Mount Constance from the Dosewallips River
- Groundhog Day
View from Jose Rizal Bridge. Cropped from 18mm; contrast enhanced, foreground objects removed. - Shiftless in Seattle
Smith-Premier No. 10 Typewriter, 1908. Separate keys were used for lowercase and uppercase. - When the moon hits your eye like a big pizza pie
(That's amore). In August 2017, wildfires in British Columbia produced enough smoke to cover most of western Washington. With little wind coming from the sea to disperse it, all of Seattle was choked in a thick, unpleasant haze for several weeks. The smoky air caused the full moon of 7 August to appear red. This picture was adjusted for contrast, but the colour was not changed. - Burgers!
- Instruments travel in packs
- A little bit of Mount Rainier, from not very far away
- Flight
- Columbia rocks
- Water's edge
- Spoon Creek Falls
Olympic National Forest, Washingto - Spoon Creek Falls
Olympic National Forest, Washingto - Shilshole Sentinel
- Ripple farm
- Wet Rocks
Salt Creek Recreation Area, Washington - Top of Cascade Falls
- Seattle Aerie No.1
- Cranebird
Osprey on a construction crane in Seattle - Soyuz TMA-14
Soyuz TMA-14 descent module, at the Museum of Flight, Seattle - Mary
Virgin Mary shrine at St James Cathedral, Seattle - Kalaloch Tree of Life
- Flyover
Kenmore Air seaplanes fly directly over my apartment every day. I like it. - Western Pacific Chemical Company, 1940
1436 Elliott Ave W, Queen Anne, Seattle. Built in 1940 for the Western Pacific Chemical Company, this two-story concrete building was designed in the Art Deco and Art Moderne styles by John Ivar Mattson. Later, it housed several chemical manufacturers, and in the 1970s, Superior Embroidery and McNamara Signs. - Alpha Happiness
Bulk Carrier "Alpha Happiness", registration Athens, at Seattle Pier 86 Grain Terminal - La Hacienda Motel
- put out my hand and touched the face of god
Mount Baker, with Black Buttes on the right. - Men at work
Construction workers, before sunrise. - Beaver Falls
South of Beaver Lake on the Olympic Peninsula. There is no sign, look for a pullout on the east side of the road. - 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/ - Bespin morning
Sunrise, Seattle. The lower level of the "saucer" part of the needle is construction scaffolding. - Snoqualmie Falls on a July Evening
- The trains come no more
Union Station, Seattle. Rail service to this station was discontinued in 1971. - All the Dome
Arctic Club dome, viewed with my widest non-fisheye lens. - Merrriman Falls
Near Lake Quinault Lodge - One Giant Leap for Mankind
Apollo 11 command module. - View from the Bottom of a Hole
Freeway Park, Seattle, looking up at 2 Union Square - Alweg Monorail
- Heron on the Rocks
- Sunrise on North Avenue
- Baldy
Baldy mountain, near Kittitas Washingto - extreme carbon
Mount Rainier, from the north. At left is Little Tahoma Peak, a remnant of an earlier summit, before volcanic activity formed the present peak about 500,000 years ago. On the horizon at right is Mount St. Helens. In the gap between Willis Wall (center-left) and Ptarmigan Ridge (center-right) is Carbon Glacier, the longest, thickest, and most voluminous glacier in the United States outside Alaska. As the glacier melts, it forms the Carbon River, seen at lower right, which eventually drains into Puget Sound. - Pride and Sorrow
Seattle's Centurylink Field, after the Orlando massacre - Dry Falls in rain
Dry Falls, central Washington, the largest waterfall on earth during the prehistoric Missoula Floods. - Free at Last
- Valley of the Daffodil
- Sourdough Ridge Peak
6951-foot unnamed peak west of Antler Peak. - Look at the colours
- Valley of the Daffodil