Sunday, September 19, 2010

Pork Pie Hat


Pork Pie Hat
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
A colorful street scene of people conversing on the sidewalk of Pike Place, complete with a silhouette of a gent wearing a 50's style pork pie hat a la Lester Young and Frank Llloyd Wright. Lately I'm seeing some guys around town even wearing 1860s style bowler or derby hats. And of course the Mraz 60's style Sinatra-meets-Ed-Norton kind of hats are still going strong.

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Seeing Red


Seeing Red
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
This was a bright corner on a dim day! The Little Red Bistro on Dexter Street is fairly new to the neighborhood and may have taken its color inspiration from the vintage red cast iron street clock by the Joseph Mayer & Brothers Co of Seattle,  probably circa 1915-1930. 

In 1897 German immigrants to Seattle, Markus, Albert, & Joseph Mayer, started a watchmaking and wholesale jewelry business in Seattle just as the Klondike Gold Rush hit. The brothers also hit the trade route north through Canada to Alaska and made their fortune. There is a photo in the Dawson City, Yukon archives of a belt made entirely of gold nuggets that brother Albert Mayer made for a woman customer. Among their lines were silver trade bracelets featuring Tlingit carving designs that they sold to Pacific NW native peoples and curios seekers. Joseph being an entrepreneur, the business expanded and formed divisions. He became an agent of a clockworks company in the east. Joseph had the cast iron street clock casings made by Pacific Car and Foundry & Co in Renton (now PACCAR), and later manufactured his own inner clockworks in Seattle. In 1922 Joseph Mayer & Bros Co became the manufacturing wing of the 3 brother's endeavors and it was this division that made and sold the 10 historic street clocks remaining in Seattle to their original owners, and in some in other western cities such as San Francisco, CA and Victoria, BC. Joseph Mayer & Bros Co. manufactured sterling flatware, hollow-ware, and souvenir spoons that are now highly collectible. I saw a panoramic photo from the UW library image collection of the employees of Joseph Meyer Bros company, and there were over 70 people in the shot. What an indication of Mayer Brothers' industry and success! By 1936, Joseph Mayer had moved his now named Northern Smelting and Refining Company from 81 Marion Street to 400 Dexter Avenue. This clock sits in front of that building, yet doesn't appear in a 1930 photo of the corner. We can assume Joseph may have installed it when he opened shop there. Or, perhaps it was erected as a memorial to him after his death. Sadly, Joseph Meyer took his life in the building in June of 1937. The business survived him and became the Northern Stamping and Manufacturing Company famous for their stamped mark of M&B between a pick and shovel (recalling the Yukon gold rush that got them started). They were purchased by E. & J. Towle in 1945, which later became West Earth through 1980. I don't know if the building was divided up into separate store fronts after that, but Little Red Bistro is at 400 Dexter Ave rather than Joseph Mayer & Brothers' old business address of 406, now just out of sight to the left. Sometimes photowalks reveal more than just a scene :-). 

Want to know more about Seattle's fab public and historic clocks?  Check out the fabulous Clock Walk.

Friday, September 17, 2010

Light Angles


Light Angles
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
A little photo collage fun with some iPhone shots at Counter Balance Park for you today. Even lo fi, low rez, quirky, grainy Hipstamatic iPhone shots can combine to make something interesting. These are night shots of an LED-lit bench at Counter Balance Park in the Uptown neighborhood.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

A Few Dwindling Moments


A Few Dwindling Moments
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
Hanging on to these last moments of a short summer seems to be in a lot of people's thoughts. I took this drive by shot and wished I were taking a lunch break to read in clear view of Mount Rainier, too.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Green Rim Fixie


Green Rim Fixie
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
Riding on the sidewalk is legal in Seattle (Traffic Code Section 11.44.120), and perhaps highly advisable on the side of the street one encounters streetcar tracks, like here. After these tracks first went in, several cyclists were badly injured when their bike tires slipped down into the track groove and caught there, sending the riders flying to the pavement. Here is one way the city devised to caution riders how to cross tracks at a safe angle. The Cascade Bicycle Club has wonderful classes to coach urban riders on how to manage a safer commute and ride defensively. I loved seeing this rider's green back rim and fixed gear bike.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Tall Order


Tall Order
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
A bit of a sun break reflected in the south windows of a UW Medicine research complex in the Cascade / South Lake Union neighborhood. The go ahead was just given in May for the expansion of the very attractive campus with three new buildings to be built over the next 10 to 12 years. Two will be seven stories high, and one eight stories. Those shown here are five stories. The new buildings will not be funded by state monies, but through federal grant agencies such as the NIH. The first of these buildings will be completed in 2012 and cost $166 million. Seattle, and especially this area of the city, wants to attract more biomedical research, seen as an area of rapid and fascinating medical, scientific, and economic development. I'm sure the local construction industry is also glad for the news.

Monday, September 13, 2010

Double Vision


Double Vision
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
I thought we might start off the week with an abstract. It isn't often one comes across two mirrors mounted at the entrance to an alley, and that's what drew me in. This is a recently redeveloped area in South Lake Union.

Sunday, September 12, 2010

A Sports Victory Weekend!


A Sports Victory Weekend!
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
The Seattle Storm's flag was flying high on the Space Needle today as the team defeated the Atlanta Dream 79-77 this afternoon, in the first game of the WNBA finals. Game 2 is Tuesday. The Seahawks defeated the San Francisco 49ers 31-6 in their opening game of the season, and the fans enjoyed the treat of the Seattle Flash Mob funsters taking the field at half time and dancing their hearts out. And this was Seattle's weekend for a triple triumph. The University of Washington Huskies defeated Syracuse 41-20. Seattle fans are doing the happy dance. I drove behind one car full of Storm fans wearing green tinsel wigs and face paint cruising over the Ballard bridge after the game, "Go Storm" painted across the back windshield. Gotta love Seattlites and their devotion to their teams. Not being an avid sports fan myself, I was photowalking in the Cascade neighborhood this afternoon. When I saw the trophy store with the Storm's flag on the Space Needle beyond I thought it would make a great shot to commemorate the weekend's victories.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Loss & Sorrow


Loss & Sorrow
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
Seattle native and University of Washington school of architecture graduate Minoru Yamasaki designed these arches and the surrounding buildings of the Pacific Science Center for the 1962 World's Fair. In 1966 construction began on his most famous design, the twin towers of New York's World Trade Center, completed in 1971. In honor of the victims of violent hatred on September 11, 2001, the suffering and sorrow of their families, and the people of this nation and other countries swept up in the waves of the aftermath, we remember the horrific losses. We pause to honor their memories. May we find a way through this pain. May love prevail over hatred. Below is the moving tribute piece, Samuel Barber's "Addagio for Strings," Leonard Slatkin conducting the BBC Orchestra at Albert Hall in London four days after the attacks, the whole world in mourning.



Friday, September 10, 2010

27 on Tap


21 on Tap
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
Floyd's Place Beer & BBQ on 1st Ave N has a cute revolving sign featuring a smiling and waving pig and cow. What more does someone who loves taking street shots need than a few patrons hanging out on the sidewalk. Although the dinner menu gets mixed reviews, with 13 screens and 27 beers on tap it is popular as a sports bar and happy hour destination now that fall football is back with us in the US.

Thursday, September 09, 2010

Pulitzer Prize Winning Playwright


Pulitzer Prize Winning Playwright
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
Seattle Repertory Theater's productions of acclaimed American playwright, August Wilson's works garnered much praise during his residency. Wilson spent the last 15 years of his life here in Seattle, and passed away at age 60 from liver cancer at Swedish Hospital in 2005. The portion of Republican Street that dead-ends into the Seattle Center campus on the west has been renamed August Wilson Way, and this is the entrance to that path.

Wednesday, September 08, 2010

Racha Noodles & Thai Cusine Uptown Lunch


Racha Noodles Uptown Lunch
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
We have really enjoyed this Thai restaurant whenever we have visited. This was at lunchtime after a music run to Easy Street Records across Mercer street, and just a short walk from Seattle Center.

Tuesday, September 07, 2010

Best of Set 2008 - 2009


Create your own video slideshow at animoto.com.

A little blast from the past for you! I put together a little Animoto collage of folks' favorite picks of my Seattle shots from 2008 and 2009. It's a rainy evening in Seattle, perfect for veiwing a little video :-).

Monday, September 06, 2010

Uptown Movement


Uptown Movement
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
I was sitting outside Uptown Espresso watching people come and go just two blocks from the Seattle Center campus where the 40th annual Bumbershoot music and arts festival took place over the Labor Day holiday weekend. I had planned to attend on Saturday, but due to the line up of popular performers including headliner Bob Dylan, tickets sold out for the main stage performances for the first time in Bumbershoot history.

Sunday, September 05, 2010

Seattle's Got Talent!


Seattle's Got Talent!
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
This is Seattle busker Emery Carl performing outside of Local Color at Pike Place Market. Emery is not only a good musician who plays guitar, harmonica, and sings well, he also dances energetically throughout his entire performance, keeping a hula hoop spinning around his waist and at times playing his guitar behind his head or balancing it aloft from his chin. I did not see him play it with his teeth, although I would not be surprised if that were in his repertoire a la Seattle legend Jimi Hendrix.  I made a little iMovie stop action animation (my first attempt. . .very amateur) of a series of shots I took of Emery. It is up on YouTube with different music for copyright reasons, but has its original score below. (sorry, I can't upload it with the original music which the animation is timed to (On Broadway by George Bensen, so you'll hear it, unfortunately in technofunk, the only selection YouTube offered that was anywhere near the timing of the original). I hope you enjoy this. And if you see Emery performing around Seattle with his pop, roots and blues one man band meets circus arts show, stop and listen for awhile. He's a great entertainer and will make you smile. :-).

Saturday, September 04, 2010

Stalking Giant


Stalking Giant
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
Here comes change. I found a crane reflected in an older light industry building window a while back. I walked by there recently. The crane won. These windows no longer exist.

Skywatch: The Moon In the Clouds


The Moon In the Clouds
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
I looked up into Friday's sky and saw the mooon behind wisps of cloud. It is dry and warm with the feel of autumn on its way. To see the skies around the world at Skywatch Friday, click here.

Thursday, September 02, 2010

Turtle Island Quartet Plays Jimi


Turtle Island Quartet Plays Jimi
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
I heard a super concert at The Triple Door last night, given by amazing musicians Mads Tolling, David Balakrishnan, Mark Summer, and Jeremy Kittel, collectively known as the Turtle Island Quartet. In a musical path that stretches 25 years and seen a few personnel changes, they've won Grammy awards, they've played with everybody and his brother, they've bent genres and melded jazz, baroque, bluegrass, funk, African, Indian, rock, pop, swing, and everything you can think of, all in the context of a string quartet. You'd have to have a very big chamber to contain their musical adventurism. They were in Seattle to premier their "Have You Ever Been. . .?" CD (give a listen) which features amazing arrangements of the works of Jimi Hendrix as well as original compositions. They wanted to play this music in Jimi's hometown, and I think if he could hear it, he would love the innovation and skill of these performing artists he has influenced and inspired. Check out this video!

Wednesday, September 01, 2010

Theme Day: Open Air Markets


Theme Day:  Open Air Markets
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
My favorite color is green. . .any shade. The lush greens, rhubarb, and beets displayed by an organic farmer at the Phinney Farmers Market looked beautiful to me. This Friday afternoon market in the Phinney Ridge neighborhood is just one of multiple farmer's markets in Seattle's neighborhoods, each held once a week, most open from May through October, but a couple of them year round. They are very well patronized and reflect the ever growing value of eating locally grown organic produce. To see open air markets around the world today, click here to view thumbnails for all City Daily Photo theme day participants.

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Coffee + Camera + Chess = 3 of my fave things


Coffee + Camera + Chess = 3 of my fave things
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
My friends, Seattle artists Pam Gray & Anne Baumgartner, turned the chain link fence around the site of the now demolished Sunset Bowl in Ballard into a summer art installation. Incorporating the alphabet and Ballard neighborhood character into their work on recycled or recyclable materials, they gave the community, which misses very much the 24 hour bowling ally that used to fill this lot, something to enjoy and smile about.

See their blog: http://onthefence2010.blogspot.com/2010/06/come-to-fence-event-on-ballard-2nd-sat.html , where there is a great video on an Art Walk night reception. Below are views of both sides of the installation and a shot of what used to occupy this space.

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Sunset's Bright SignBits of the Old Colorful Sunset Bowl

Monday, August 30, 2010

Calling It A Day


Calling It A Day
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
These folks were all disembarking at the boat ramp and getting their trailers ready to tow their boats out and head home after a lovely summer afternoon on the waters of Puget Sound.

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Sunday Bridges # 15: Rainbow Bridge Rainy Day


Rainbow Bridge Rainy Day
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
The Swinomish Channel "Rainbow" Bridge north of Seattle in LaConner, WA, spans the Swinomish Channel (a dredged slough linking Padilla Bay and the delta at the mouth of the Skagit River). The folks in LaConner liked the orange base coat of paint so much they insisted the top coat also be orange, making it the only orange bridge in Washington.  To see more bridges from around the world, check out Louis LaVache's Sunday Bridges.

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Goodbye Jillian & Jonathan!


Goodbye Jillian & Jonathan!
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
See that little smiling face and waving hand, and the smile under the white cap. Well, of course you don't, so I'll put in arrows. These are two small friends of mine waving goodbye as they depart from Seattle Center on the Monorail. I got to visit with them and their fabulous parents Kaye and Paul yesterday afternoon. It had been five years since I'd seen them, and the youngest will be starting first grade. Yikes! They've been visiting Seattle this week and will head home in time for the first day of school. Bye bye to summer, too! Have a good trip home!

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Here We Are Now, Entertain Us


Here We Are Now, Entertain Us
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
While Nirvana's anthem "Smells Like Teen Spirit" played at the International Fountain, water jets danced to the music and created a large rainbow in the mists. Can you see the people on the other side? "Hello, hello, hello, how low."

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Lingering Summer Vistas


Lingering Summer Vistas
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
It is an absolutely perfect day today, sunny, warm, clear skies with mountain vistas in every direction. I know in many other communities school has already started, but our kids don't head back to classes until after Labor Day (and Bumbershoot!), and our colleges don't begin fall quarter until late September. So we have this gift of time and lingering summer. Many folks head up to one of the islands to enjoy themselves and wring every last moment out of vacation. This is a place I love to go, the picture perfect little town of Coupeville on close-by Whidbey Island. So picture perfect, in fact, that a Sandra Bullock / Nicole Kidman film was made right here, using the fabulously delicious Knead & Feed Bakery Restaurant as a movie set, and repainting most of the vintage shops along the waterfront street. This family was taking in the view of Penn Cove and Camano Island from the deck. Then above their heads in a knot hole of the wall I noticed a family of another sort moving about. This fledgling is milking it for all its worth, still getting parents to bring it some grub. I thought of Brookville Daily Photo's Abe Lincoln (yes, he IS related to THAT Abe Lincoln) and his beautiful bird and backyard wildlife photos when I came in close for this shot. Hope you like this, Abe!

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Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Towers From Three Eras


Towers From Three Eras
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
Rainier Tower (the Modern one that shrieks 70's architecture and seemingly pierces the earth in the foreground) and 1201 Third Avenue Tower (the late 80s Post Modern one aka "The Spark Plug" or the artist. . .er, I mean tower formerly known as WaMu) dominate this view of the skyline. Between them and quite overshadowed by the other two is the much shorter Seattle Tower, a 1920s Art Deco treasure and a national landmark. Pay no attention to the much shorter Cobb Building below on the right (with the roof garden and giant busts of stylized Indian Chiefs). It's just a building, not a tower. :-)

Monday, August 23, 2010

Twilight


Twilight
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
The popular Twilight series of books and movies with settings in Forks and Seattle got me thinking of more than a favorite time of day when I saw this wooden boat on Lake Union. My daughter had recently wanted a girls night out with me to see the third movie installment, Eclipse, despite my not having seen any of the others and her not liking them or the books all that much. We found it playing at a small vintage movie theater in the Columbia City neighborhood. So small, in fact, that the box office person also took our tickets, ran the pop corn machine and swept the carpet. So that I wouldn't be lost, my daughter brought me up to speed on the characters, local settings and plot before the film rolled. This shot has no buff werewolves or pasty teen vampires, but I thought some of you might like to see this fun find just the same.

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Fast as the Wind


Fast as the Wind
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
Prior to last May I might not have seen pedicab drivers like this guy wearing a helmet. . .nor the majority of bike messengers I've photographed as they hustle around town, either. King County issued new helmet regulations in May. A lot of cities have apparently been caught off guard by how rapidly pedicab services are growing nation-wide. In the past two years, accidents involving pedicabs and cars in Seattle, New York, San Diego and elsewhere have resulted in fatalities or severe injury to passengers and pedicab drivers, so cities and counties have been trying to determine what appropriate business regulations for public safety might be needed. With our hills, rain, narrow streets and downtown traffic, it seems very wise for all cyclists to don helmets, but I get it that some pros have looked at it differently and that regulations have a big impact on small service businesses. It's just that so many of my cycling friends and even my bike commuter husband have been hit or, for whatever unexpected reason. . .a car door opened, a car driver turned into or in front of them, road debris. . ., found themselves flying through the air ass over teakettle and landed on their head--thankfully with their helmets lessening their head trauma and sparing their lives. When it's your job to ride like the wind all day like this guy, it's something to take seriously.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Weekend Sense of Fun


Sense of Fun
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
Sometimes these things will happen. I have no idea who these people are. They walked into the frame when they emerged from Post Alley across the street and just kept coming toward me as they crossed the street, smiling all the way. I loved it. Two on the town having some fun. Summer does that to folks, although in my experience most Seattlites are a bit more reserved in their attire, except during the Pride and Solstice parades and at sporting events. Perhaps these two had been to a game at the nearby stadium. Maybe we won? :-) Oh, don't ask!

Friday, August 20, 2010

Bringing Down the Jib


Bringing Down the Jib
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
Summer evenings on the Sound are gorgeous. These boats were among many returning to Shilshole Bay Marina at sunset and crews were readying to take down the sails. The yellow evening light made shadow puppets of a couple people on the far boat, while the yellow and red jib cast its reflection like a lantern upon the water.

Friday, August 13, 2010

Tempering Chocolate


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I had no idea the work and expertise involved in hand dipping confections in chocolate. It is a skill that takes time and much practice to develop.  Here we are at Oh! Chocolate in the Madison Park neighborhood learning how to hand temper chocolate. We worked with very high quality warmed chocolate on cool stone, massaging it with our fingers. If one gets it to just the right temperature and consistency before coating the confection, the final product will have that nice little snap when it meets your tooth and retains that dark and dreamy deep chocolaty appearance (as opposed to the chalky cocoa mottled look your old chocolate bunny had when you finally remembered it a few weeks past its prime :-) ). None of our efforts could have made it into the store's lovely packaged offerings. Let's face it, we felt more than a bit like preschoolers finger painting with chocolate, and that's just about what our creations looked like. Tempering chocolate is not so easy as our host's skill made it seem. When we thought we had it just right, we tried dipping this easy fare of Oreos, graham crackers, and strawberry cream wafers.  It would have taken us weeks of constant practice to work up to liquor based creams and the like. Though few of us met with much success this first try, we all came away with an appreciation of the nuances of this skill. And yes, we got to bag our homely creations and fold up those parchments with the left over chocolate to enjoy another day.  Tomorrow, on to the next stop in the tour.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Guilt-Free Pleasures


Guilt-Free Pleasures
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
I'm going to take you along on our chocolate tour of Seattle we took during our staycation. It is something you can feel good about because you'll just be feasting your eyes. Your hips are safe :-). This was a participatory tour, and we actually hand tempered high quality chocolate and dipped cookies in it. The right chocolate can make even a humble Oreo Cookie feel as special as a French macaron. Here you see some that were professionally dipped and packaged for sale by Oh Chocolate! Tomorrow I'll show you the hands-on fun we had.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

iPhone Wednesday #54: J'suis. . .


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Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
. . .American. This little redhead was waiting to be seated at The 5 Spot, a popular restaurant featuring American regional cuisine. Currently the specialty area featured on the menu is Seattle, a first in the restaurant's 20 year history and a way to celebrate the significant anniversary. Thus you see the fishing net and crab. The interior features original artwork relating to all things Seattle.
It's my iPhone Wednesday shot for this week, where the image is taken and edited with an iPhone and available apps.

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Turning Westward


Turning Westward
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
These distinctive peaks in the Olympic range known as The Brothers rise above the vista of Elliott Bay, Bainbridge Island, and a cityscape that includes the glow of the bright red E of the famous 60s era Edgewater Hotel (much exaggerated here from the double pane I was shooting through). This is one of those shots that has the city's catchphrase "Metronatural" written all over it.

Monday, August 09, 2010

Sparkle & Shine


Sparkle & Shine
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
We recently took a little "staycation" and played tourist in our own town. This was one of the views from our hotel at twilight. You are looking south along the angled corridor of 6th Avenue. The vista is certainly crowded with tall office buildings (Columbia Center the tallest and the Municipal Building to the left) and hotels (the Crown Plaza all shimmery reflections and the Hilton with its blue logo). If all these buildings weren't in the way you would be looking directly at Mt. Rainier (Little Tahoma peak is just visible to the left). I think what appears to be stars in this southern sky is actually a bit of air traffic out near the airport. There is sure a lot of sparkle and shine to be seen in the downtown skyline on a summer night. Where do you like to stay when you visit Seattle?

Sunday, August 08, 2010

Western Titan


Western Titan
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
The seagoing tug boat Western Titan is making its way home under the open railroad bridge along the ship canal. Contemporary tugs like this regularly tow cargo between Seattle and Alaska. The Western Towboat Company has 19 different tugs and several barges in its fleet and has been family owned and operated here since 1948.

Saturday, August 07, 2010

Deliniated Border


Deliniated Border
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
Something makes me think just one sign hasn't worked in the past :-). Next door to the private property is this obscure and very quiet little public access beach with a secluded bench near the mouth of Salmon Bay where I like to hang out and watch the boats go by. It is the polar opposite of the atmosphere you will find at Lake Washington's Seafair events today and tomorrow with the exciting demonstrations of speed and skill thousands will witness at the Seafair Hydroplane races and the roaring precision airshows featuring the Blue Angles. Tranquility or excitement, it's all good :-). Hope your summer (winter) Saturday is great wherever you spend it.

Friday, August 06, 2010

Skywatch: Summer Night View


Skywatch:  Summer Night View
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
The view @ twilight on a summer evening filtered through the neon signs of Pike Place Market. This postcard view is my Skywatch Friday offering. To see more skies around the globe (and perhaps a shot or two of the Northern Lights),  checkout Skywatch Fridays here.

Thursday, August 05, 2010

Happy Birthday Chuck!


Happy Birthday Chuck!
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
If you wander through Pike Place Market you may come across the wonderful work of professional photographer Chuck Pefley, and if you're lucky, Chuck himself. We came upon him just after he'd finished a conversation with a customer and was starting to take a reading break in his Market day stall. I've met Chuck a number of times since he joined the City Daily Photo Blog family with One a Day, Mostly Seattle. The longtime Seattle resident is not only a skilled photographer, but also a Vespa scooter enthusiast active in the Westenders Scooter Club, and a very fun and nice guy who loves the beautiful scenes, friendships and adventures his travels near and far bring him (often illustrated in his beautiful prints). Today is Chuck's birthday and I'm sending best wishes for a wonderful day!

Wednesday, August 04, 2010

Freeway Park


Freeway Park
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
Seattle's "freeway with a lid on it" created a Convention Center and an urban park able to span the I-5 cut between First Hill / downtown and Capitol Hill to the east. Freeway Park and the Washington State Trade and Convention Center (green windowed buildings to left) sit over the freeway and display brutalist architecture's ability to merge with natural forms like the hanging garden greenery that descends to the freeway below. In view to the left in the park is the George Washington profile sculpture on posts that also seem to serve as an arbor for climbing greenery.

Tuesday, August 03, 2010

The "Fit" Does


The "Fit" Does
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
Drive by dining? Well, this is life in Post Alley :-). The Fit car lives up to its name as it inches past diners at the Kells Irish Restaurant & Pub.

Sunday, August 01, 2010

Theme Day: Bright Colors


Theme Day: Bright Colors
Photo & Text © 2010 Kim- Seattle Daily Photo. All rights reserved; no use, alteration, reproduction or republishing in any media.
We went walking and for dinner on a clear and warm summer evening and ended up at Cafe Campagne. Along the way I noticed the colorful umbrellas of the balcony of Copacabana Cafe and the summer flowers that line the upper story all along Pike Place Market seemed a perfect way to share in today's "Bright Colors" theme. Cities all over the globe are showing off their colorful side. Click here to view thumbnails for all participants.