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March 09 2011
A note of remorse
February 23 2011
Goodbye Seattle, hello (again) California
December 25 2010
The Fearless Biker
November 23 2010
Seattle Snow Day
October 05 2010
Timelines
October 01 2010
Empty Faces
September 22 2010
On Her Dad’s Shoulders

“On Her Dad’s Shoulders” is a very cute image grabbed by Victor at deviantArt.
September 21 2010
Harry

In an earlier post, I talked about a $2 portrait project on Flickr, run by Thomas Hawk. The above photo, “Harry,” is one of Mr. Hawk’s own pieces in that group, and probably my favorite.
See this photo on Flickr. After reading the story, you’ll feel like you’ve met Harry yourself.
September 20 2010
Decay in Green

“Decay in Green” is one of many insanely good street-shots grabbed by Colin Jones, who posts his work very modestly and quietly on deviantArt. He still shoots film, and seems to prefer a Leica M6. Can’t say I blame him, go see his gallery for yourself.
September 19 2010
Old Street Underground Station

Image by Annie Mole on Flickr, as part of her London Underground Tube Diary.
September 18 2010
Street

“Street” is a very cute grab by Gregory Dallis. See more of his photos on deviantArt.
September 17 2010
A Literal Sense

For as many great street grabs as there are out there, it’s not every day you see one that that qualifies in the literal sense. This is just one of many gorgeous pieces of street photography by Baris Ozturk, whom I’ve mentioned before in a previous post. Aside from his being an amazing photographer and a rather modest fellow, one of the things I like about Baris is how he watermarks his images. I usually decry the use of watermarks, but he manages to do it in a way that, instead of ruining the photo, almost enhances it. He basically took something that everybody else is doing wrong, and does it right.
See this photo on on Flickr or deviantArt.
September 16 2010
Solidarity

Walked up on this guy near Five Points, on 5th Avenue in Seattle. Full size available here.
September 15 2010
Steve

“Steve” was grabbed last year as part of a $2 portrait project undertaken by Troy Holden and a friend of his in San Francisco. The project’s premise is simple enough: Troy walks around the city and offers $2 to any panhandlers who ask for money, but only if they’ll allow him to take their picture. Steve, shown above, is a homeless man they came across in SoMa, who was more than willing to be part of the project.
This particular $2 portrait project can be viewed on Flickr, and is run by Thomas Hawk — I’ll post some his work later.
September 14 2010
Something Real

You may remember a very early post here on Loupe called Full Tilt, which had an amazing image by Romain Laurent that baffles me to this day. He’s got some new work posted now, the above being part of a series called “Something Real.” See more of Romain’s work at his portfolio site.
September 13 2010
S I M U L A C R U M

This one’s called “S I M U L A C R U M” — and it has to be one the funniest street photography grabs I’ve seen in a while. The photographer, Lukasz Kazimierz (burningmonk at deviantArt), noted that he had no idea what the guy was doing in the picture. To make it funnier, another of my absolute favorite street photographers, Baris Ozturk, left a comment that the same guy had shown up in several of his images from a recent trip to Japan.
September 12 2010
Don’t Trust the Newspaper

“Don’t trust the newspaper” is one of my favorite themed portraits — by xxchange at deviantArt.
September 06 2010
Donny Osmond and the Sad Narwhal

We had an interesting stroll through Seattle yesterday while hunting down the folks from Intel WiMAX. The town was buzzing with PAX 2010 attendees, so it was more interesting (and sometimes crowded) than usual — but I like it that way.
We found “Sad Narwhal,” shown in the above image, on a random bit of plywood that had been set up as a cordon around construction at the corner of 5th and Battery. Full size available here.
Sharp Beast

This is the lot-facing wall of the mysterious Wexley School for Girls building on 5th Ave, which we later found out is actually an advertising & media agency that seems to only use Adobe Flash for everything. Either way, the figures painted on the outer wall were pretty interesting — even if they didn’t make any sense. Full size available here.
Donny Osmond

On our way to the Yellow Leaf Cupcake Co. on 4th Ave, home of the Pancakes & Bacon cupcake (henceforth known as the Greatest Thing to have Ever Existed), we noticed something odd on the back of the lady walking in front of us. It was Donny Osmond, and he was residing on the back of her hoodie. How could I resist? Full size available here.
Sad Song

This old man sits near the corner of 6th and Pine just about every day. He plays what I believe is called an Erhu, and he nearly always plays sad, sad songs. He’s extremely good, but I have a feeling that he doesn’t get tipped often since most of the people walking by, fresh on their way home from a shopping spree, don’t feel as sad as he does. Full size available here.
Side note: Those windows across the street are really clean. The reflection on the left is me.
The Drummer

We see this guy all over Seattle. Wherever he goes with that drum, he brings with him a bubble of city atmosphere that warms up this traditionally chilled town. Due to the already large homeless population in the city, he doesn’t get tipped much, but he does get noticed. Full size available here.
September 02 2010
Seattle Public Library

Alright, so we finally went to the Seattle Public Library (it only took us a full year). If you haven’t ever seen it before, it’s a bit jarring; the structure itself is a large misshapen monster of glass that looks more like an enormous greenhouse than anything else, and it’s plopped down in the middle of the city with older, much more boring architecture surrounding it. I grabbed a few shots inside but there were really only a couple that I liked enough to post. C’est la vie, non?
The shot above turned out to be one of my favorites, I call it “Let your feet guide you.” The library is so big and labyrinthian inside that in order to make it easier to navigate, they placed sorting numbers on floor tiles between aisles. I would say they’re Dewey Decimal sorting codes, but I could have sworn they stopped calling them that a few years ago. Either way, it’s pretty useful when you’re lost in a library this size. Full size available here.
Window Grid

I grabbed this shot on the 10th floor, looking northwest from an interior sort of crow’s nest they have set up. Full size available here.
Down Below

This was also shot on the 10th floor, looking down into the cavernous center of the building. It can cause a feeling of acrophobia just being up there, and the floor at the bottom isn’t even ground level, either — it’s the 3rd floor. Full size available here.
Browsing Unevenly

The entire library was made by designers looking to make it unlike other libraries, so there are pockets of completely uneven layouts right next to perfectly ordered sections. It’s nice to break the monotony. Full size available here.
Going Up

We found liberal use of extremely long, narrow escalators. Full size available here.
Book Return

I grabbed this one as we were leaving, just outside the library on 5th Avenue. I think she was homeless; she was just standing there, staring at the book return box. Full size available here.
August 26 2010
The Japanese Garden

Grabbed this shot just a couple of feet directly above a literal feeding frenzy at the huge koi pond in Seattle’s Japanese garden. The koi in the pond are proportional gigantic, and they swarm wherever they think food may be. Some of the fish in this picture are easily larger than a dachshund. Full size available here.
The images in this set were all grabbed at the Japanese garden in Seattle’s arboretum (map in a box). It’s a cute little garden that’s really just big enough to make for a nice summer morning’s walk. This time around there’s a nice mix of black & white and colour. Yes, colour.
Pads

Just a portion of the lily field in the pond. Full size available here.
Mr. Turtle

Mr. Turtle resides in the pond. He’s quite friendly, and actually swam right up to us in high hopes that we had brought him a treat. Full size available here.
You Are Not a Fish, Mr. Turtle

Though there are several other shellbacks in the neighborhood, Mr. Turtle likes to hang out with the gargantuan koi that live in the pond with him. They, however, do not accept him as one of their own. Full size available here.
Cave of Coins

Found this view inside an old stone lantern-tower in the garden. Apparently people had been leaving pennies in it for luck, Canadians included. Full size available here.
The Dancing Bokeh Spider

This one’s best viewed really big. The spider’s near center-frame, but I didn’t want to crop out the web and background-bokeh just to make him more prominent. I did, however, make a cropped version for better spider-viewing (see it in a box). Full un-cropped size available here, with the cropped version here.
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