
- Calling the Healing Waters (Soap Lake)
Monumental sundial sculpture by David Govedere and Keith Powell, 2009 - Soap Lake
- Containers
- St. Mary of the Angels
Catholic Church, Bucktown, Chicago. Architect Henry J. Schlacks, 1899. - Murhut Falls 2017
Murhut Falls (Olympic National Park) in May 2017. The crossed fallen logs in front of the lower stage have been there since at least 2010. www.wta.org/go-hiking/hikes/murhut-falls - Calling the Healing Waters (Soap Lake)
Monumental sundial sculpture by David Govedere and Keith Powell, 2009 - Lake Quinault Spruce
World's Largest Spruce tree - Sitka Spruce at Lake Quinault, Washington. 191 ft high, 58ft circumference, about 1000 years old. - Between a rock and a vertical place
- Volcanic ejecta
- Mount Constance Sunset
Sunset behind Mount Constance, from Myrtle Edwards Park, Seattle. Two-frame HDR, cropped from 300mm. - Apl Le Havre, Singapore
- Port of Seattle
- Soap Lake
- MSC Nerissa in the Port of Seattle
- 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/ - Little Tahoma
Little Tahoma Peak, a secondary peak of Mount Rainier, on a cloudy day in July - RAF Frame
Propeller tip photo frame, World War I, at the Museum of Flight in Seattle - Things that are white
- Owl.
Spectacled owl, Pulsatrix perspicillata, at Woodland Park Zoo, Seattle. - Some Boats
- Aplomado falcon
- Shilshole
- Matthew Island
Matthew Island in Keechelus Lake, near Snoqualmie Pass - Gas Works
Gas Works Park, Infrared. - Sunset on James Island
- Lake Quinault Spruce
World's Largest Spruce tree - Sitka Spruce at Lake Quinault, Washington. 191 ft high, 58ft circumference, about 1000 years old. - Ray's on the water
Ray's Boathouse restaurant, with neon sign from 1952. Destroyed by fire in 1987, then rebuilt. - Gas Works
Gas Works Park, Infrared. - Lake Quinault Spruce
World's Largest Spruce tree - Sitka Spruce at Lake Quinault, Washington. 191 ft high, 58ft circumference, about 1000 years old. - Gorge
- Lake Quinault Spruce
World's Largest Spruce tree - Sitka Spruce at Lake Quinault, Washington. 191 ft high, 58ft circumference, about 1000 years old. - 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. - I am Seattle (Magenta)
Space Needle lit up in the T-Mobile brand colour for the year-end fireworks (December 2016) - Little James Island
- Rainbow Sherbet (Seattle)
- Sun Top Fire Lookout
- Rush Hour (December)
- The North Face
From Sun Top Fire Lookout - Lake Quinault Spruce
World's Largest Spruce tree - Sitka Spruce at Lake Quinault, Washington. 191 ft high, 58ft circumference, about 1000 years old. - Duck, Duck, Goose.
Roasted waterfowl suspended in a shop window, Chinatown, Seattle. - Rocky Brook Falls
229 foot horsetail falls. - First Beach, La Push WA
- Cranebird
Osprey on a construction crane in Seattle - Two Thousand Years
Ancient Douglas-fir trees at the Grove of the Patriarchs, Mount Rainier National Park. Both are over one thousand years old, and have just barely enough remaining foliage to keep them alive. One was truncated by a storm; the other has a dead crown. - Lake Quinault Spruce
World's Largest Spruce tree - Sitka Spruce at Lake Quinault, Washington. 191 ft high, 58ft circumference, about 1000 years old. - Sun Top Fire Lookout
- Sun Top Fire Lookout
- A One-Hour Tour
- Little Tahoma
From Sun Top Fire Lookout - Atop the ridge