
- Buckaroo Tavern
Formerly in Fremont, the rescued and restored neon is now at Seattle Tavern & Pool Room, Georgetown - Trigger Building
Neon collection at the Trigger Building in Seattl - Taken from the Cleaners
Auditorium Cleaners operated from 1930 to 1991 in the Odd Fellows Lodge #86 building in Fremont, Seattle. When they closed the neon sign (stripped of its glass) was relocated from the front of the building to the alley behind. (Directions: just southeast of the Lenin Statue) - 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. - pac man cloud
- one orange evening
- The Pine Box (Beer Inside)
The Pine Box - a Capitol Hill bar located in an old mortuary - Just a tree
- Interstate 5
- 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." - 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." - Guild II
- Guild 45th
- Guild 45th
- Guild 45th
- Plague Inside
- Fluckinger Machine Works
Previously on the outside of a building at 4800 Airport Way S, now restored and located indoors at Seattle Tavern & Pool Hall, 5811 AIrport Way S. - Buddha of the Sidewalk
- #tagging is a #felony
Seattle Brewing and Malting Company - Malt House
- a little goes a long way
- Georgetown Hat and Boots
- Remembering Donnie Chin
Donnie Chin, hero of the International District, was murdered July 2015. His shop, Sun May, remains decorated in his honour. - Seal of Goon Dip
Milwaukee Hotel in Seattle, built by Goon Dip, 1911. - Ghost of Gim Ling
Ghost Sign on the back of the former Gim Ling restaurant, later China Gate, later divided into Bambu and Golden Hong Market. - Seattle Aerie No.1
- Eagles' Dome
Dome over entryway of Eagles Auditorium building, downtown Seattle - Hong Kong
- Bardahl is Dark
Bardahl Manufacturing neon sign, no longer operational. - Queen Maude I on the Throne of Down
- Nisqually-Paradise Road
- The Floor is Glass! The Floor is Glass!
Space Needle restaurant level during a pause in construction. - Angels Above
- Moon over Ballard
Shot from a sailboat. - Look to the West
My home Tiki bar. - Sailors' Delight
Sunset on the Olympic Mountains, shot from a sailboat on Puget Sound. Title comes from "Red Sky at Night, Sailors' Delight", and indeed this delighted the four of us amateur sailors. - Ray's on the water
Ray's Boathouse restaurant, with neon sign from 1952. Destroyed by fire in 1987, then rebuilt. - Emerald Dawn
- Chasing light
Photographer David Julian on Steptoe Butte - Uniontown Co-Op Assn
- Of course
- Windows on the Palouse
- Panama Hotel
- Octolamp
- Egan's
- To Concourse
- Georgia State Capitol
- The Fallen One
Blade from a Vestas V80 wind turbine, damaged during construction, now an exhibit at the Wild Horse Wind Farm visitor center. 129 feet long. The open end, where it would attach to the hub, is about 6 feet in diameter.