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  • The sudden dark of a late-afternoon shower is broken by Seattle's landmark Pike Place Market sign. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Signs of brightening
  • It’s not a scene from the old “Roadrunner” cartoon, but it’s close: A directional sign inside the Rimrock Meadows resort development. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Sign of the times
  • The Elephant Car Wash sign on Battery Street, this location opened in 1956.<br />
<br />
Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times<br />
<br />
REPRODUCTION INCLUDES SEAM OF SKETCHBOOK
    Pink Elephant Sign
  • This billboard was displayed in the early 1970s during a recession that saw Boeing lay off about 70,000 workers. (Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times, 1971)
    Sign of the times
  • The demise of Rocky the Goat, symbol of the Great Northern Railway, extended to its removal from atop a building at 1902 Fourth Ave. The Burlington Northern trademark replaced the 56-foot-wide, 60-foot-high sign. (Bruce McKim / The Seattle Times, 1970)
    Symbolic departure
  • It's an old trick, but it always seemed to work. This Kent Café got many second looks with its upside-down sign. (Bruce McKim / The Seattle Times, 1970)
    It always works
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Sign of the times
  • An umbrella and pedestrian on First Avenue  are silloueted against a darkening sky early in mid afternoon.  (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Rain in the forecast
  • All roads seem to lead to Mount Rainier from the Madison Street overpass. (Josef Scaylea / The Seattle Times, 1967)
    Mount Rainier beckons
  • A man loosens soil in the planter boxes above Pike Place Market. (Mark Harrison, The Seattle Times, 1997)
    Till he sees flowers
  • Looking north on Fourth Avenue in downtown Seattle, lights from automobiles glistened and winked as Christmas shoppers hurried on their appointed rounds. Street lights blinked and the emblem of a department store shone like a huge decoration. This photo was taken from the window of an automobile.<br />
<br />
Josef Scaylea / The Seattle Times, 1967
    Rainy night in downtown Seattle
  • On the surface level, the city maintains a calm demeanor. But often, the cacophony of political noise floods public opinion in this liberal, opinionated Northwest region of the country. This forward thinking city pioneers by example in its choices, political views and future undertakings.<br />
Marcus Yam / The Seattle Times
    Cacophony
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Pink Elephant packs its trunk
  • Sunlight streams into Pike Place Market as Seattleites get a break from gloomy skies and rain. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)
    Seattle sunshine
  • Hillary Rodham Clinton talks with crowds and signs her new book, "What Happened" at Elliott Bay Book Company in Seattle Tuesday, Dec. 12, 2017.<br />
(Erika Schultz / The Seattle Times)
    Hillary Rodham Clinton
  • Snow falls along First Avenue in downtown Seattle, surrounding the Pike Place Market sign. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Snowy Seattle
  • Overhead view of Portage Bay in foreground and Lake Union in background, and a snow-covered Capitol Hill at left. Downtown Seattle is further in the background. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Portage Bay
  • Hillary Clinton talks with fans and signs her new book, “What Happened,” at Elliott Bay Book Company in Seattle on Tuesday. (Erika Schultz/The Seattle Times)
    Hillary Clinton in Seattle
  • Signs at a passenger entry door alert employees to open floor boards during assembly. Within, stairs lead to the upper deck on the final 747. (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)
    Safety first
  • At right, a new camera sign warns drivers not to block the intersection at 4th and Battery in Seattle. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)
    Intersection camera
  • Viewed from Seattle’s Magnolia area, a floatplane over Puget Sound is dwarfed by massive clouds. A sign of showers? (Ken Lambert/The Seattle Times)
    A floatplane flies through big cloud..ound
  • Dorothy Shaul and Leonard Metzger sorted misaddressed packages at the Seattle Post Office in 1950. Did someone mail you a Christmas present which you didn't receive? Chances are it sat among the 1,100 packages Seattle postal workers couldn't deliver. (The Seattle Times)
    Signed, sealed, not delivered
  • Seattle City Councilman Wing Luke, acting mayor for a week, signed his first official document in both Chinese – as Luke Wing Chung – and English. The document was a bond for a heating-equipment dealer’s license.  Luke is the first person of color on the Seattle City Council and the first Asian American elected to public office in the Pacific Northwest. (Times staff photo by Larry Dion, 1964)
    Councilman Wing Luke
  • President Joe Biden addresses the topic of climate change at Seward Park in Seattle on Earth Day. Biden later signed an executive order to inventory old-growth forests and plant 1.2 billion trees. (Daniel Kim / The Seattle Times)
    President Biden, Seward Park,
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