
- "A" and Convergence
- #tagging is a #felony
Seattle Brewing and Malting Company - #WeGotThisSeattle
Seattle's Space Needle, closed to visitors since mid-march, added a flag reading "#WeGotThisSeattle", to bolster the city's spirit during the Covid-19 pandemic. The flag is tattered due to a sudden intense hail storm on the afternoon of March 31. - 10 points for Gryffon Door
- 101 Auto Body
- 111 Yesler
Handmade road sign in the Seattle Underground, under the corner of Yesler and Occidental. - 1201 Third
- 1926
Figure on the Camlin Hotel - 2016
- 2016
- 2016
New Years Day fireworks 2016 Seattle Space Needle - 2016
New Years Day fireworks 2016 Seattle Space Needle - 2019 (the first minute)
- 5th Avenue
5th Avenue Theatre and Rainier Tower, Seattle - 74th Street Ale House
- A Bridge to Fremont
- A Hunter-Seeker!
Can't get me if I don't move. It's too dark in here for it to see clearly. - a little goes a long way
- A One-Hour Tour
- A space needle from not very far away
- Abe's Barber Shop
Beacon Hill, Seattle - Add Bardahl
Classic neon sign, no longer working. - Addiction (2017)
Northwest Tea Festival haul. - After the Viaduct
Alaskan Way, December 2019, from the Pike Place Market parking garage - Air Superiority
Sopwith Camel (replica) over a downed German aircraft, Museum of Flight, Seattle - Airshow's end
Space Needle fly-by on last day of Seafair 2018 - Alaska 737
Alaska Airlines N320AS, a Boeing 737-990, northbound from Sea-Tac at sunset. - Alien sky needle
Sunrise, February 10 2016 - Alki Spud
Alki Spud Fish & Chips, West Seattle. Brothers Jack and Frank Alger started selling fish and chips (ten cents for two pieces of ling cod and fries in a cardboard boat) out of their Alki Avenue garage in 1935, cutting a takeout window in the side of the building. During WWII, rationing made oil for frying difficult to obtain, and Spud nearly had to close, but neighbors banded together to donate their oil ration tickets, saving the fish and chip stand. After the war, Spud replaced the old garage with a modern building of a nautical design, including portholes. By 1961 they had replaced this with the current Googie-inspired building featuring an upswept roof. Spud has since expanded to other neighborhoods and cities around Seattle, but the Alki location is the original. - All Aboard the Doughnut Train
- All Power to the Engines
or, "The west end of an eastbound Space Shuttle." Full Fuselage Trainer (a full sized shuttle mock-up used for astronaut training) at the Museum of Flight, Seattle - All the Dome
Arctic Club dome, viewed with my widest non-fisheye lens. - Alley Chief
Chief Seattle artwork in alley, near 1st and Washington, Pioneer Square. - Almost Home
Bainbridge Island ferry approaches Colman Dock, as seen from Smith Tower, Seattle - Alpha Happiness
Bulk Carrier "Alpha Happiness", registration Athens, at Seattle Pier 86 Grain Terminal - Alps Hotel
- Alweg Monorail
- An elegant weapon, for a more civilized age
Luke Skywalker's lightsaber, original film prop. EMP Museum, Seattle. - Angels 2019
- Angels Above
- Angels Above
- Anticipation
- Apl Le Havre, Singapore
- Aplomado falcon
- Araneus diadematus
Female European garden spider (cross orb weaver) in Seattle - Archie McPhee
- Arctic Club Dome
Northern Lights Dome Ballroom, Arctic Club Building, Seattle, 1916. - 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/ - Artificial Eclipse
- Ascend