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(Possibly) Hamilton No. 258, 24 line
Source: Hamilton’s Wood Type, Catalog No 14. (1899)
babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015019775728&vie...
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K. James Henderson
Alphabet of Birds 1864, 2017
Altered book on wood panel. Type specimens printed from the wood type collection at Depression Press Mfg. & Ink, Inc.
40x30”
She said I think I'll go to Boston...
I think I'll start a new life,
I think I'll start it over, where no one knows my name
Hoy escuchĂ© mal una promociĂłn con la que te podĂas ganar un Nintendo Wii comprando no sĂ© quĂ© cosa. Yo escuchĂ©/entendĂ que con un Nintendo wii podĂas ganar una vida, y me hizo sentido por los honguitos
Erected in 1913 by the Blodgett Company Ltd on the site of the city's former library on Broadway, 100 feet off Washington Street. The Condon-Noonan Company had intended to open it as an independent theatre but before it was completed Sullivan and Considine took a lease on the premises and finished the construction. When completed it was the home of the Orpheum shows. Tom Conlan was the theatres first active manager and he succesfully initiated the house to pictures during the summer of 1915. Sullivan & Considine afterwards moved the Orpheum shows to a theatre further up Broadway, transferring S & C vaudeville to the former Orpheum and changing the name to the Empress. As the Empress it was operated until the Sullivan & Considine circuit left the field in May of 1916, when Turner & Dahnken leased the house from Ackerman & Harris of San Francisco, who had fallen heir to the S & C business. The theatre was reopened on May 14th 1916 as the T & D Theatre after a refurb when the projection booth was enlarged and modern photoplay equipment installed, as well as the renovation of the interior and addition of a Hope-Jones Wurlitzer Unit Orchestra organ, (the pipes of which formed the stage setting) & electrical display, at a cost of $50,000.
The building itself was 100ft x 200ft with seating for 2,300 - of which 1,400 were on the lower level. There were 15 exits on to 3 streets. The walls were decorated with autumn scenes, with rich curtain hangings. Projection was furnished by 2 x Power's machines. Manager of the T & D at this time was M. O. Leonhart, who had come from the T & D theater in Berkeley, California.
it became the Hippodrome from c.1917-1925. In c.1926 architect B. Marcus Priteca re-modelled the theatre for Pantages and it became the Pantages Theatre from 1927-1929. Known as the Orpheum Theatre from 1929 until it closed in the mid- 1970’s. Its last operators were Mann Theatres who gave a seating capacity of 1,360. It was demolished for a clothing store to be built on the site.
Source: archive.org/stream/movingpicturewor30newy#page/397/mode/1up
These are pictures from Friday the 9th, 2016 of some of the set up and behind the scenes work for The Rocky Mountain Pinball Showdown & Game Exposition!
Mario 1UP mushroom hat ^^ I know purple is for the game-over mushroom, but I didn't have any red or green yarn.
Please don't use my images on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission - rr.restifo@gmail.com. © All rights reserved.
Spraypaint/ Graffiti by 1UP in Berlin-Kreuzberg.
More Infos about Urban Art at Berlin Streetart Blog.
Ok so yes, I do have probably like 20 too many pictures of my awesome plush 1up 'shroom. If you're really good when I upgrade to a pro account i'll make a whole set just for him and his travels.. like that bloody gnome thing.
IS: 1UP (græni aukalĂfssveppurinn) Ăşr Mario Bros.
Flúrari: Bleksmiðjan
ENG: 1UP (the green extra life mushroom) from Mario Bros.
Tattoo Artist: Bleksmiðjan
Spraypaint/ Graffiti by 1UP and Just near Train-Station Warschauer StraĂźe in Berlin-Friedrichshain.
More Infos about Urban Art at Berlin Streetart Blog.