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  • A Boeing 767 arrives at Boeing Field ferrying parcels for UPS. <br />
<br />
Dean Rutz / The Seattle Times
    Boeing 767 for UPS
  • A dog rides on a stand up paddle board in Lake Washington. (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times)
    Paddling dog
  • A paddleboarder makes her way across a sparkling Green Lake as the sun begins to set behind the lake. (Mike Siegel / The Seattle Times)
    Paddling on sparkles
  • The sun paints the sky pink as it rises above the Cascade Mountains early morning in this view from Lake Forest Park near the north end of Lake Washington. (Mike Siegel / The Seattle Times)
    Sunrise over the Cascades
  • A coal train approaches SAM’s Olympic Sculpture Park in Seattle. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)
    Seattle coal train
  • Despite the cooler temperatures, and even cooler wind, this paddle boarder set out on to Puget Sound from Golden Gardens Park. (Dean Rutz / The Seattle Times)
    Winter paddle boarding
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Pike Place Market pop ups
  • Jeff Miller, who helps oversee functional tests of the 747 engine and landing gear, lines up engine No. 3 with the mount on the final new 747 as he slowly drives it into place under the giant wing.  (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)
    Lining up Engine No. 3
  • The Twisp River Fire lights up the sky near the Community Covenant Church in Twisp early in the morning Thursday, Aug. 20, 2015.  <br />
<br />
Erika Schultz / The Seattle Times
    Twisp River Fire lights up the sky
  • Wind whips up fire near Salmon Creek Road southwest of Omak Friday August 21, 2015.<br />
<br />
Bettina Hansen / The Seattle Times
    Wind Whipping Up Fire
  • The giant nose section of the final 747 sticks up from beneath a deck before it is craned into position for during the final body join. (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)
    Giant nose section
  • Mount Baker glows during sunrise, seen from Possession Sound off Everett.(Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)
    Sun, snow light up Mount Baker
  • A man jumps off the high dive at the Colman Pool in West Seattle. Swimmers of all ages lined up for their turn to jump and dive off the 3-meter diving board during the public swim. (Erika Schultz / The Seattle Times)
    Taking a dive
  • Heavy traffic kicks up a lot of water on the freeway as showers continue to fall.  Looking north near the overpass that crosses I-5 at Belmont Ave. E. in Seattle. (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times)
    Rear position lights
  • The ice crystals of a snowflake can be seen using a macro lens, which allows for close and precise focusing close to an object. (Erika Schultz / The Seattle Times)
    Up close snowflake
  • Tulips (Mike Siegel / The Seattle Times)
    Tulips up close
  • Wildflowers and Goode Mountain and Goode Glacier in one frame.  Breathtaking views greet hikers near the end of the seven-mile North Fork Bridge Creek Trail that ends tucked up up against the 9,000 ft. high Mount Logan.  (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Wildflowers and glaciers
  • Pedestrians cross Sixth Avenue at Pine St. in downtown Seattle between heavy rain showers. (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times)
    Winds and rain kick up
  • A Perseid Meteor makes its entrance into Earth's atmosphere, burning up for all to see from Table Mountain near Ellensburg. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Streaking across the sky
  • Tall Ships form up to parade in Elliott Bay.  At right center is the Lady Washington, directly behind to the left is the Hawaiian Chieftian, at far right in the distance is the tallest Tall Ship the Europa. (Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times, 2002)
    Tall Ship parade
  • Some of the original loops of the meandering Duwamish River were still visible in 1922 after dredging had opened up a straight, deepened waterway. The river once swung all the way from the West Seattle bluff to Beacon Hill. The old loops were eventually filled to create industrial land. (Seattle Times archives, 1922)
    Duwamish River, 1922
  • With 293 steps, Blaine Stairway in Capitol Hill is one of the longest outdoor public stairways in the city.<br />
Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Stairway Hike up to Capitol Hill
  • Ichiro, who rang up Hall of Fame numbers in 11-plus seasons as a Mariner, bows to cheering fans at Safeco Field before his first at bat as a New York Yankee [July 23, 2012]. (Dean Rutz / The Seattle Times)
    Ichiro’s final bow
  • Under cloudy skies, a few pigeons look for a place to land on some wires along S. Graham St. near Martin Luther King Jr. Way S. in Seattle. (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times)
    Up on the high wire
  • A winter sunrise over the Cascade Mountain range lights up the cloudy skies in this view from the Horizon View neighborhood of Lake Forest Park in the morning. (Mike Siegel / The Seattle Times)
    Winter morning sunrise
  • The Fab Four's fans fill up the Coliseum at the Beatles' 1964 performance in Seattle. For the police, it was crazy duty trying to deal with the 'mass hysteria'; for the kids, it was the time of their lives. (Vic Condiotty / The Seattle Times)
    It's gotta be rock-n'-roll music
  • Seattle Mariners pitchers warm up during Spring Training on a cloudy day in Peoria, Arizona Monday February 23, 2015. (Bettina Hansen / The Seattle Times)
    Spring into action
  • Remnants of summertime plants and fall foliage are visible from the hike up to the summit of Mount Grant. (Mike Siegel / The Seattle Times)
    Summer remnants
  • The Hulda Klager Lilac Gardens in Woodland Washington are in full bloom. The annual Lilac Festival that begins in April and ends on Mother's Day. These blooming tulips shows other flowers bloom in the gardens. (Mike Siegel / The Seattle Times)
    Tulips spring up
  • Freezing temperatures at the Mercer Slough in Bellevue -- along the Lake to Lake trail which runs from Lake Washington to Lake Sammamish. (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times)
    Ice up close
  • Sunset Hill Park lives up to its name as Seattleites watch the sun fade over the Olympic Mountains. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)
    Sunset over the Olympic Mountains
  • Pink Salmon sitting in a small pool on their way up the Dungeness River to spawn. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Pink Salmon
  • A beautiful sunset at Edmonds Marina Beach Park brought out many people just wanting to bask in it. (Dean Rutz / The Seattle Times)
    Soaking up the Sunset
  • A sky crane helicopter fills up with about 2,400 gallons of water from Lake Chelan near Manson to fight the First Creek Fire. Friday August 21, 2015<br />
<br />
Alan Berner / The Seattle Times
    Helicopter Refilling with Water to F..ires
  • Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson holds up a copy of The Seattle Times featuring the Super Bowl XLVIII winners for the crowd to see, during the Seahawks Super Bowl parade along 4th avenue in downtown Seattle, on Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2014.<br />
<br />
By Marcus Yam / The Seattle Times
    Seahawks Super Bowl Parade
  • Volcanoes line up all the way to the Sisters in Oregon. (Dean Rutz / The Seattle Times)
    Volcanoes
  • For the 1962 World’s Fair, a newcomer cropped up among the onion-shaped spires of St. Spiridon's Cathedral, a Russian Orthodox church. (Johnny Closs / The Seattle Times, 1973)
    Cascade neighborhood skyline
  • It's not every day a shop gets a repair job like this one. A tow truck delivered this car to the Central Oldsmobile Co. with a bowling ball imbedded in its grill. The driver met the ball bouncing down Queen Anne Avenue North as she drove up the hill. She thought it was a soccer ball, then heard a crash. Patrons at a bowling alley at the top of the hill said people saw three little boys carrying a bowling ball around that night. The ball dented the bumper and grill, smashed a headlight, cracked the battery and threw the front end out of alignment. Damage was estimated at $412.83. (Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times, 1981)
    Hot off the grill
  • Roasted brussells sprouts with serrano ham and rosemary. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)
    Hamming it up
  • The Vashon-Southworth ferry bumped gently into the Fauntleroy slip on schedule at 7:25 o'clock despite the fog. The gates went up. Out of the mass of hurrying pedestrians burst a bearded bicyclist, pedaling like mad. (The Seattle Times, 1961)
    Cycling off the Vashon Ferry
  • Lavender sits wrapped up in a bouquet. The plant has many uses including as an ingredient in cosmetics, fragrances and baking. (Jordan Stead / The Seattle Times)
    Fragrant lavender
  • Aerial view looking up the Elwha River that was blocked by the Lower Elwha Dam (the dirt berm) creating Lake Aldwell.  The river now flows naturally from the Olympic Mountains in the distance. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Elwha: Roaring back to life
  • A mother hummingbird feeds one of her two babies in their tiny nest up in a pear tree. <br />
<br />
Ellen Banner / The Seattle Times
    Dinner Time!
  • A mother deer and her baby make it up a scorched hill off Green Lake Road in Okanogan Saturday August 22, 2015 after wildfire tore through the area.<br />
<br />
Bettina Hansen / The Seattle Times
    Wildlife and Wildfires
  • Fireworks light up the Seattle sky for the Family 4th at Lake Union.<br />
Seattle Times staff photographer
    Fourth of July at Gasworks Park
  • John Grade's sculpture, "Wawona" is almost 64-feet high made from the salvaged woods from the hull of the sailing ship of the same name.  This view looks up to the sky.<br />
Alan Berner / The Seattle Times
    Wawona Sculpture MOHAI
  • The world has shrunk, and in no small measure because of Boeing. The company helped early Seattle by firing up its economic engine, shaping its politics and laying the foundation for a strong middle class. Now, having become a global player and facing competition more fierce than it has ever been, the aerospace titan is looking literally around the world for cheaper labor and willing partners.  And we are left to question both our relationship with the company and, to some degree, our very identity as a region. <br />
Marcus Yam / The Seattle Times
    Boeing Jet City
  • Democratic presidential candidate Elizabeth Warren, a U.S. senator from Massachusetts, jogs up to the stage for a town hall event at Seattle Center on Sunday. (Bettina Hansen / The Seattle Times)
    Elizabeth Warren
  • Downtown streets aren’t the most pleasant on cold and rainy evenings, but all those lit-up trees sure brighten up the scene. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Bright lights, dark city
  • A puddle bubbles up in the rainfall on First Avenue in downtown Seattle. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Gloomy and wet
  • This sketch is the result of three late afternoons of iPad sketching from Melrose Ave. East on Capitol Hill.  (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Way up in the air, there’s the feeli..tmas
  • Headlights reflect on the wet roadway as heavy traffic kicks up a lot of water as showers continue one afternoon in Seattle.  Looking north near the overpass that crosses I-5 at Belmont Ave. E. in Seattle. (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times)
    Headlight reflections
  • The historic property at 619 Western Ave. escaped demolition when the state gave it an extensive upgrade to bring it up to code. Once restored, the building's six floors became prime office space and new tenants started moving in. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    619 Western Ave.
  • "Sonic Bloom," solar-powered flower sculptures by artist Dan Corson, light up in front of the Boeing IMAX Theater at the Pacific Science Center in the Lower Queen Anne neighborhood. (Lindsey Wasson / The Seattle Times)
    Solar-powered "Sonic Boom"
  • With their spinnaker sails up, taking advantage of an east wind, these sailboats, part of the Downtown Sailing Series first race, head for a turn buoy by the Great Wheel on the Seattle waterfront. <br />
<br />
Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times
    Downtown Sailing
  • Caught in the cool shadows of the Washington Park Arboretum, Fiddlehead Ferns reach skyward to finish their unfurling--opening up to world.  <br />
<br />
Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times
    Fiddlehead Ferns
  • A turtle climbs up onto a log  floating in Lake Washington's Union Bay to join his comrades.  They seemed to be enjoying the wonderful sunshine. (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times)
    Turtle Train
  • Looking east up the Skagit River near Rockport with the Cascade Mountains in the backround. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Skagit River
  • A perfectly symmetrical rainbow lines up with traffic on the Hood Canal Bridge on the edge of Jefferson County. This view looks northwest. (Ken Lambert/The Seattle Times)
    Somewhere under the rainbow
  • Rowing shells stack up like water spiders in Union Bay after the Opening Day. (Harley Soltes / The Seattle Times, 1989)
    Water spider waltz
  • Light pollution, in all its glory here, lights the clouds over Seattle, which reflect back on the glassy waters of Elliott Bay. The still water serves as a mirror to add even more light to a cycle proving difficult to reverse. (Benjamin Benschneider / The Seattle Times)
    Lighting up the clouds
  • Now, Say Ahh! Spic and span and feeling fit as a fiddle as well as good natured after one of her special lubrication jobs, Wideawake, the elephant, opened up at the Woodland Park Zoo, to have her mouth examined  in a routine inspection. Animal fat is applied to the animal's hide with a jumbo-model paint-brush.  It is a substitute for jungle mud baths and is applied to prevent the elephant's hide from callousing and cracking. (The Seattle Times Archives, 1958)
    Say Ahh!
  • Dogs dressed up as "Our Little Devils" wait for the judging to begin during Dog-O-Ween at Seattle's Genessee Park. The event, sponsored by Citizens for Off-Leash Areas (COLA), featured a costume contest.<br />
John Lok / The Seattle Times
    Little Doggie Devils
  • The city is on the move, getting bigger, building up and reaching out. The emergence of a new generation of white-collar workers has changed the socioeconomic landscape of Seattle. Its resource-extraction and manufacturing past is being overshadowed by the work of the so-called creative class in science and technology.<br />
Marcus Yam / The Seattle Times
    Growing Pains in Jet City
  • Campanario joined the crew aboard the tug for a very short but important part of the journey: the sail from Ballard to Harbor Island, where the tug hooked up a fully loaded barge. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Tough tugs, big cargo
  • Motorists may have felt slightly out to sea while driving across the Evergreen Point Floating Bridge. Winds up to 40 miles an hour churned Lake Washington and sent waves crashing over the rail-of the bridge. (Richard Heyza / The Seattle Times, 1963)
    Natural Fury
  • A squirrel focuses on a snack at Volunteer Park in Seattle. Rain is predicted until a lull mid-week and then picking back up again for the foreseeable future. (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times)
    A marvelous morsel at Volunteer Park
  • Brothers swing at Garfield Playfield as the rain lets up. (Jim Bates / The Seattle Times, 1990)
    Swinging siblings
  • A cocktail called the "Last Word" from an early 1950s book "Bottoms Up" by Ted Saucier. The drink has been a hit around the world. <br />
(Photo of by Erika Schultz / The Seattle Times)
    The Last Word
  • A red umbrella brightens up a gray day in downtown Seattle.<br />
<br />
Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Rainy Day Downtown Seattle
  • The veteran ferry Ballard is seen here during its conversion to a floating restaurant – the Golden Anchors. The stern was transformed into a glass enclosed Gold Room. After sinking twice the boat was broken up in 1973. (The Seattle Times, 1945)
    Ferry Ballard
  • Capt. Brent Bierbaum at the helm and three of his four-person crew down below worked together to chain up the barge. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Tough tugs, big cargo
  • Bus ridership is way up in King County, as commuters leave driving in traffic jams and paying high parking prices behind. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    The commuting life
  • Why did the salmon cross the road? A male chum salmon tries to get across the Skokomish Valley Road to reenter the Skokomish River and continue its journey to the salmon hatchery up stream. This fish and the others along the side of the road seemed to wait for the wake from passing vehicles to make their dash across the road. (Harley Soltes / The Seattle Times)
    Why did the salmon cross the road?
  • An American coot, also known as a mud hen, picks up traction on the waters of Union Bay as it takes off from the Union Bay Natural Area. The popular bird-watching spot is near the Center for Urban Horticulture in Seattle. (Alan Berner/The Seattle Times)
    Kooky coot running start
  • Pumpkins line up at the Carpinito Brothers annual pumpkin patch.<br />
Chris Joseph Taylor / The Seattle Times
    Pumpkin Patch
  • Bike data from 2019 shows that traffic is up 12% at the Fremont Bridge, seen during the morning commute Thursday, Jan. 2, 2020 in Seattle. The bike counter can be seen to the right of path. 212543
    Bike Fremont Bridge
  • Since the legendary car wash opened in 1956, the rotating pink elephant has witnessed the Space Needle go up and Amazon’s headquarters emerge from former parking lots just a few blocks away.  (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Pink elephant
  • Mount Baker provides a spectacular backdrop for K20, a female born in 1986. Orcas can swim 75 miles a day and more, with bursts of speed up to 30 mph, and are capable of diving deeper than 3,000 feet. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times, 2018)
    Orca and Mount Baker
  • The Womxn's March on Seattle flows down South Jackson Street on Saturday. Organizers originally had predicted a crowd of up to 50,000. The number of participants was at least more than double that; organizers are saying 200,000 marched. (Bettina Hansen / The Seattle Times)
    Womxn's March Seattle
  • Hikers walk up the last pitch of volcanic ash and pumice from the 1980 eruption before reaching the 8,350-foot elevation and the edge of Mount St. Helens' crater. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times, 2006)
    Sitting on a volcano
  • Smith Tower, the tallest building on the West Coast when it was completed in 1914, now looks up to the bigger kids on nearby blocks. (Steve Ringman/The Seattle Times)
    Seattle architecture
  • The Moon Bridge invites a moment of reflection. According to the self-guided tour map it symbolizes the difficulty of living a good life. “Hard to walk up and hard to walk down.” (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Moon Bridge, Kubota Garden
  • A Pygmy rabbit soaks up some sun in a controlled rearing site on the edge of Moses Coulee. State Fish and Wildlife biologists are rereleasing the rabbits, which are endangered, from the last-known wild population. In winter, 90 percent of their diet is sagebrush. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Pygmy rabbit
  • After years of anticipation, the 2.5-mile streetcar line connecting Capitol Hill and Pioneer Square is finally up and running. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Many take a spin on city’s new streetcar
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