Obliterating Time: The 1922 Kodachrome Color Test Girl

The past always seems to be so…old.  Previous styles, mores, customs seem to have vanished, replaced wholesale with an entirely new set of styles, mores, and customs. That’s why we can snicker at ridiculous stuff like men with handlebar mustaches riding crazy bicycles and corpulent women vamping it up as if they were sex goddesses.… Continue reading Obliterating Time: The 1922 Kodachrome Color Test Girl

Cutaway of Admiral Byrd’s Antarctic Snow Cruiser, 1939

Click Here For Large (1353 x 1200 Pixels)   In an issue of LIFE magazine from October 30, 1939 that I have is a great cutaway drawing of Admiral Byrd’s snow cruiser.  Admiral Byrd was a naval officer who was the first person to reach the North and South Poles by air. At 55 feet… Continue reading Cutaway of Admiral Byrd’s Antarctic Snow Cruiser, 1939

Forgotten Woodstock: Seattle Pop Festival, 1969

Site of Seattle Pop Festival, Gold Creek, Woodinville, WA

Drive through Woodinville, Washington and it has the glimmer of an Eastside Seattle suburb that is rapidly expanding.  With its Target, brewpubs, and pricey housing developments, Woodinville is fairly unremarkable, a rural area reinventing itself as a wine-tasting destination. But on one weekend years ago, thousands descended on a rural and remote Woodinville to hear a… Continue reading Forgotten Woodstock: Seattle Pop Festival, 1969

When Jim Morrison of The Doors Stayed at the Hyatt Regency Atlanta

The Hyatt Regency Atlanta, built in 1967, is famous as one of the first–if not the first–example of a large atrium hotel.  The inside of this 22 story is scooped out, with rooms facing each other and public spaces below. Built by John Portman, the Hyatt Regency–originally Regency Hyatt House–is an architecturally significant building that… Continue reading When Jim Morrison of The Doors Stayed at the Hyatt Regency Atlanta