The Seattle Times Store | Art & Photo Prints

Show Navigation
  • GALLERIES
  • SEARCH
  • CUSTOM REQUESTS
  • CONTACT
  • ABOUT
  • MY ACCOUNT
  • SHOPPING CART
  • Back to Seattle Times Store

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 48 images found }

Loading ()...

  • The 1969 Lockheed YO-3A with a Continental YO-360D 210HP engine using a six-blade propeller, to reduce engine noise to allow the engine to operate at a lower speed. (Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times)
    Planes from Vietnam War
  • 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
  • Gary Bowers, who helps oversee functional tests of the 747 engine and landing gear, walks past engine No. 3 as he and other employees work to hang it on the wing on Nov. 8. (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)
    Walking past Engine No. 3
  • Jeff Miller readies the mount before engine No. 3 is moved into place on the final new 747. (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)
    Engine No. 3
  • (Gabriel Campanario  / Seattle Times news artist)
    Vulcan classroom
  • (Gabriel Campanario  / Seattle Times news artist)
    The Vulcan
  • An All Nippon Airways 787 takes off from Paine Field in Everett. (Mike Siegel / The Seattle Times)
    787 take off
  • A Northern Pacific train crossed a bridge north of Arlington. Arlington was established when the Seattle, Lake Shore Eastern Railroad was completed to this point. Later it was taken over by the Northern Pacific, which provided rail connections for express and freight through Seattle to all points of the world. (The Seattle Times Co., 1950)
    Bridge to Arlington
  • Pio Fitzgerald fell in love with the 747 as a little kid. He eventually earned his pilot’s license, an aeronautical engineering degree, a master’s and a Ph.D. In 2011, he was named Engineer of the Year at Boeing Commercial Airplanes. (Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times)
    2011 Boeing Engineer of the Year
  • Senior cargo engineer Darrin Noe says the 747’s vast size and unique nose door mean it can carry everything from sturdy drilling rigs and military vehicles to high-value Maseratis and race horses. (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)
    Senior cargo engineer
  • 2023 01 29 A10 and 11
  • Technical Fellow Darrell Marmion recently retired from Boeing after almost 36 years. He worked on about 800 747s. (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)
    ‘I’m retiring with my airplane’
  • This year’s debut of the 737 MAX brought increased production at the Renton plant, but Boeing’s total workforce in the state has shrunk. (Mike Siegel / The Seattle Times)
    Boeing jet count climbs
  • 2023 01 29 A01
  • 2023 01 29 A13
  • Two employees on scissor lifts sandwich the newly lowered nose section of the final 747 before it is joined to the wing section during the final body join.  (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)
    Sandwich the nose section
  • A Boeing employee claps after fuselage section 44 was slowly lowered into place by crane over the wing box assembly during the wing-body join, Sunday, Sept. 18, 2022, in Everett, Wash.
    Wing body join
  • Quality production manager Thuylinh Pham was a child when she immigrated to the United States on a 747 aircraft. Now several of her family members work at Boeing. (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)
    It's a family affair
  • Sherri Mui was team lead on the completion of the 747 cargo and air conditioning bays, a job that is physically challenging. (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)
    Challenge accepted
  • A view from the tail looking forward through the lower cargo deck of the final 747. (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)
    Lower cargo deck
  • The very last new Boeing 747 taxis past a row of unfinished 777X aircraft Jan. 10 at Everett’s Paine Field as it gets ready for a test flight. (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)
    Last test flight
  • The nose section of the final 747 sails — with the help of two massive overhead cranes — above its wings and center fuselage during final body join. (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)
    Nose above the wings
  • In September, a worker in special orange gloves and hard hat signals adjustments to the overhead crane operator as the aft fuselage section slowly descends into place behind the wings during final body join in Everett of the last 747 ever built. (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)
    Overhead crane adjustment
  • The twin peaks of Seattle's Smith Tower and King Street Railway Station loomed high above an outbound Northern Pacific. (Seattle Times Archives, 1967)
    Twin Peaks
  • A Delta Air Lines 747 that will retire by year end [2017], one of the last of these jumbo jets to fly for a U.S. carrier, visits its birthplace, Everett, on a farewell tour of the country. The jumbo jet lands at Paine Field on a wet and rainy morning. (Mike Siegel/The Seattle Times)
    Delta Boeing 747 farewell tour
  • Rookie driver Andrew Tate in the Les Schwab/Sound Propeller takes off and goes high in the air on the final lap, winning the race. (Greg Gilbert/The Seattle Times, 2016)
    Rookie Andrew Tate's hydroplane victory
  • Boeing's number three 787 takes off from Boeing Field for a test flight. Mt Rainier looms in the distance as the 787 takes off. (Mike Siegel / The Seattle Times, 2010)
    787 test flight
  • 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
  • Kelvin Anderson, left, and his son Vic take in the view from a deck overlooking the very last 747 (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)
    Taking in the view
  • The sun sets on an era of aviation manufacturing as the very last Boeing 747 lands at Paine Field after a Jan. 10 test flight. (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)
    Sun sets on last test flight
  • Built in 1906, the King Street Station replaced the old Great Northern depot on Railroad Avenue between Marion and Columbia. A large clock tower dominated the new building providing time for the entire Skid Road area. (The Seattle Times, 1930)
    Training day
  • Its afterburner exhaust flame glowing, an EA-18G Growler is about to take off from Naval Air Station Whidbey Island during an exercise. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)
    Jets, helicopters, rockets
  • 2023 01 29 A09
  • 2023 01 29 A12
  • The final 747 aircraft towers above the Boeing Freeway after it is rolled out of the assembly bay for the first time at Boeing’s Everett factory on Dec. 6. (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)
    Towering above the freeway
  • Vic Anderson, left, and his father, Kelvin, walk across the factory floor past the very last 747. Vic was the team lead on assembly of the 747 center fuselage and final body join, and his father is an “Incredible,” part of the crew that built the very first 747 in the late 1960s. (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)
    Like father like son
  • Johnny Patchamatla retired at the end of 2022 after 21 years at Boeing. His father, an immigrant from India, designed components of the original 747 flight deck. (Kevin Clark / The Seattle Times)
    It's a family affair
  • 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
  • Delta employees, SkyMiles customers and Boeing employees who worked on the 747-400 program, attend a ceremony at the Future of Flight Museum in Everett to honor the airplane that rolled out of the 747 factory in Everett on Sept. 13, 1999. This Delta Air Lines 747 will retire by year end [2017] and is on a farewell tour of the country. The 747 is seen through some giant windows in the background. (Mike Siegel/The Seattle Times)
    Delta Boeing 747 farewell tour
  • A Delta Air Lines 747 that will retire by year end [2017], one of the last of these jumbo jets to fly for a U.S. carrier, visits its Everett birthplace on a farewell tour. (Mike Siegel/The Seattle Times)
    Delta Boeing 747 farewell tour
  • Firemen (from left to right): Captain L.P. Davis, Julius Matison And Albert Erickson. The horses are the famous team of Toby, Ceasar and Spider; Ceasar, in the middle, can't be seen. (Seattle Times archives, 1913)
    Steam pump truck
  • A crew member of the ship carrying Bertha, the giant boring machine, is in red (far right) dwarfed by the 57 1/2-foot cutting face of the machine. <br />
Alan Berner / The Seattle Times
    Bertha
  • Snakes of electrical wiring wind their way through the cargo hold of the final 747. (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)
    Electrical wiring
  • The Blue Angels’ “Fat Albert”, a C-130T,a Lockheed-Martin Hercules four engine aircraft, flies low over Lake Washington and the log boom. An all-Marine Corps crew of three officers and five enlisted men personnel operate the plane. It carries more than 40 maintenance and support personnel, their gear and spare parts to support the Blue Angels as they travel from town to town. (Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times)
    Seafair Weekend and Fat Albert
  • 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
  • Young airmen swing far above the heads of their fellows in the Seaplane at Playland in 1932. Below the plane is the engine of the Miniature Railway. (Seattle Times Library)
    Flying the Playland Seaplane
  • BNSF engines, pulling freight, head north along Puget Sound towards Edmonds. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)
    BNSF freight train
  • Engineers turned on lights of the Alaskan Way viaduct for the first time. This photograph, looking south along the viaduct's upper deck from a point near Bell Street, shows how the new structure looked at night. (George Carkonen / The Seattle Times)
    Seattle's Viaduct in 1953
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x