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  • One of the first Tully's locations is on the Eastside in Clyde Hill. <br />
<br />
Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Tully's Coffee Shop
  • Champagne for sale at a local wine shop.<br />
Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times
    Shelves of Champagne
  • (Gabriel Campanario  / Seattle Times news artist)
    Vulcan classroom
  • (Gabriel Campanario  / Seattle Times news artist)
    The Vulcan
  • By King Street Station, warm coffee from a spicy red truck. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Celesto Espresso
  • A latte with a perfectly-shaped foam heart from Storyville Coffee at Pike Place Market.<br />
<br />
Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Latte Heart
  • Equipped with a new store front and completely remodeled inside, this shop at 4339 University Way became University district headquarters for Nordstrom's. Inc., Seattle shoe company. (Seattle Times file, 1935)
    A move's afoot
  • Bothell Country Village Shops.<br />
Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times<br />
<br />
REPRODUCTION INCLUDES SEAM OF SKETCHBOOK
    Bothell Country Village Shops
  • Aerial view of construction of the Northgate Shopping Center on March 3, 1950. This view is looking southeast, with Fifth Avenue Northeast in the background and Northeast Northgate Way running left to right in foreground. The building under construction in the foreground is Northgate Hospital. (Seattle Times archive)
    Northgate Mall in the 1950s
  • Three days after five people were killed by a gunman inside Cascade Mall in Burlington, an impromptu memorial for the victims shined brightly by the east entrance of the shopping center. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Skagit Strong: Tokens of support
  • Public Market Center, 1939. (Seattle Times archives)
    Public Market Center | Seattle | 1939
  • Seattle Times File, 1950
    Pike Place Market, 1950
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    The Write Stuff
  • Westlake Center is reflected in the Holiday Tree balls sitting in the square showing off the rain and cold. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Holiday rain
  • (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Georgetown's Hat n' Boots
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    The Lion Heart bookstore
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    victor obrastoff making pens.jpg
  • Amazon Go, the world’s first ever cashier-free store, opened to the public in Seattle. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Amazon Go: Get out fast
  • A fishmonger gets ready to throw a fish over to his co-workers behind the counter at world famous Pike Place Fish Market. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)<br />
<br />
REPRODUCTION INCLUDES SEAM OF SKETCHBOOK
    Fish Tossing
  • Thousands gather in Westlake Plaza in downtown Seattle to watch the lighting of the Christmas tree and the Macy's star. Fireworks commemorating the 50th anniversary of the star were fired from the roof of Macy's Department Store.<br />
Seattle Times staff photographer
    Christmas Tree Lighting in Seattle
  • A shopper in downtown Seattle checks out swimsuits in a Nordstrom window during a rain shower. <br />
Ellen Banner / The Seattle Times
    Sunny Weather Ahead
  • Amazon Go, the world’s first ever cashier-free store, opened to the public in Seattle. The novelty drew long lines around the Day 1 building. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Amazon Go: Long lines in
  • Bill Humphreys, 65, above and below, calls the monorail “a bus and a train combined.” It’s powered by electricity, but it runs on 64 tires. Sixteen tractor-trailer size “load tires” go on top of the rail and 24 run sideways on each side, guiding the trains along the track. Humphreys, a native of Texas, said he’s worked for the monorail for 12 years.
    Seattle Center Monorail maintenance shop
  • City People’s Garden Store is one of many small businesses along Madison Street near Lake Washington Boulevard. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Garden shop, Madison Street
  • 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
  • Block of cheese from The Calf & Kid artisan cheese shop.<br />
Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times
    Cheese Please
  • This little building dating from the 1920s was most recently used as a printing shop, but it speaks of Pathé’s great international reach in the early years of the film industry. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    The Pathé building in Belltown
  • The sound of cranes digging in the rubble and pounding on half-demolished walls was louder than the morning traffic going by. The Seattle Sketcher stood at the corner of Fourth Avenue and Union Street watching the wrecking ball come down on the shopping center adjacent to Rainier Tower. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Rainier Square tumbles down
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