
- Sun Dogs over Puget Sound
- Eclipse droppings
Seen in Seattle during the partial eclipse of 21 Aug 2017 - Sun Crescent
2017 Eclipse, Seattle - Shilshole Sentinel
- 5th Avenue
5th Avenue Theatre and Rainier Tower, Seattle - Comet Lodge Cemetery
Abandoned graveyard in Seattle. - Comet Lodge Cemetery
Abandoned graveyard in Seattle. - Angels Above
- Angels Above
- Fat Albert
Blue Angels C-130T transport - Four Angels
- Airshow's end
Space Needle fly-by on last day of Seafair 2018 - Citrus sun
Wildfire smoke gives a dim orange sunrise in Seattle - The Floor is Glass! The Floor is Glass!
Space Needle restaurant level during a pause in construction. - Look Out, Look Down
The Space Needle's new glass floor provides a skyline view that you can walk into. - Through the Halo
- Mourning stripes
Space Needle with American flag at half-mast after the death of Senator John McCain. Sunrise, looking east. - Paramount
Paramount Theatre, Seattle, built by Paramount Pictures in 1928. Originally the Seattle Theatre, renamed the Paramount in 1930. This marquee and vertical neon sign are a 2009 replica of the original. - University Inn
- 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. - Hoge Building
Built in 1911 by James D. Hoge, owner of Union Trust & Savings Bank, located here. Tallest building in Seattle before Smith Tower's completion in 1914. - Tacoma Union Station
Built 1909-1911. - Crystal Tower
- Chihuly Ceiling
- Winthrop Hotel 1925
- Winthrop Hotel
Winthrop Hotel, 1925, now Winthrop Apartments. Tacoma. - Bostwick Building
A historical marker attached to the building reads: "IN HONOR OF ROSSELL G. O'BRIEN who in the Bostwick Building, Tacoma, Washington, on October 18, 1893, during regular session of the Washington Commandery of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the U.S.A., did originate the custom of standing during the rendition of the Star Spangled Banner, the national anthem of the United States of America." - Tacoma Municipal Building
Tacoma City Hall since 1977; previously Rhodes Medical Arts Tower. Built 1930-1931 by John Graham & Associates. 17 stories. Though my camera was precisely centered, the bottom of the photo appears asymmetrical; this is because the building is built on a hillside. The two sides of the entrance are of unequal length, as the sidewalk slopes upward to the right. - Municipal Building, Tacoma
Tacoma City Hall since 1977; previously Rhodes Medical Arts Tower. Built 1930-1931 by John Graham & Associates. 17 stories. - Bostwick Building
A historical marker attached to the building reads: "IN HONOR OF ROSSELL G. O'BRIEN who in the Bostwick Building, Tacoma, Washington, on October 18, 1893, during regular session of the Washington Commandery of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the U.S.A., did originate the custom of standing during the rendition of the Star Spangled Banner, the national anthem of the United States of America." - Angels 2019
- Add Bardahl
Classic neon sign, no longer working. - Washington for Warren
Senator Elizabeth Warren presidential campaign rally, Seattle Center, August 2019 - 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.