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  • 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
  • A 787 instrument panel flight simulator shows the plane taking off from Boeing Field in Seattle. Mount Rainier is in the background. This simulator is at Boeing Systems Labs in Seattle. (Mike Siegel / The Seattle Times)
    Flight simulator 787 instrument panel
  • A shimmery reflection of Seattle's original skyscraper, the 38-story Smith Tower, completed in 1914 on Second Avenue in the Pioneer Square neighborhood, is seen in the glass panels of downtown's new, 48-story F5 Tower on Fifth Avenue. (Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times)
    Old meets new
  • The Space Needle is captured upside down in tiny raindrops on a window in downtown Seattle. The droplets act like wide-angle photographic lenses, inverting the images and distorting them as they run down the window. (Jimi Lott / The Seattle Times, 2005)
    Space Needle raindrops
  • To offer a view of what the night sky over Seattle would look like without light pollution, photographer Benjamin Benschneider created a photo illustration in two steps. First, he photographed the Seattle skyline from Queen Anne Hill. Next, he obtained a wide-field photo of the south Milky Way from and by Maxine Nagel, treasurer of the Seattle Astronomical Society. He then blended the images to create this one. (Benjamin Benschneider / The Seattle Times)
    Seattle skyline photo illustration
  • The King Street Station is reflected in the Vulcan building in Seattle.  (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times)
    Vulcan image meld
  • The Space Needle and Queen Anne Hill seen from the Columbia Center's Sky View Observatory. Image taken with a tilt-shift lens. (Bettina Hansen / The Seattle Times)
    Seattle bird's eye view
  • A rainbow of flare (a photographic term for the change an image undergoes when the lens is pointed directly into the sun) occurs during sunrise when the sun is reflected off a building in downtown Seattle.  The Smith tower is at right. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Downtown flare
  • A beautiful sunrise as a double image of Duck Island at right appears on a mirror smooth Green Lake.<br />
<br />
Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times
    Green Lake at Sunrise
  • A sailboat and Seattle's Great Wheel seem tiny when seen from the Columbia Center's Sky View Observatory. Image taken with a tilt-shift lens. (Bettina Hansen / The Seattle Times)
    Bird's eye view of Elliott Bay
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