View allAll Photos Tagged Storefronts

Steve Frankel, who owned it since 1999, lost his lease when the building was sold to a developer. The bar originally served the tens of thousands of Brooklyn Navy Yard personnel who worked in the shipbuilding industry, but in recent years catered to the workers in the many industrial businesses and film and television studios, which rented spaces at the revitalized Navy Yard industrial park. Photo from 2008 and full text appear on our book “Store Front II-A History Preserved”.

WEEK 27 – Return to Superlo, Set I

 

Here we've gone ahead and moved closer to the Superlo storefront as we prepare to head inside. It's definitely interesting to think that this building has had no fewer than three grocery store chain logos gracing its exterior! I don't have a picture of it from during the Seessel's or Albertsons days, but here's a photo I found of it as Schnucks (which I'm pretty sure I've linked to before, but oh well). Those auxiliary signs along the storefront were all removed when Superlo moved in, and I'm pretty certain that they had been there since the store opened in 1992. This year, it's celebrating its 25th anniversary!

 

Superlo Foods // 945 Goodman Road E, Southaven, MS 38671

 

(c) 2017 Retail Retell

These places are public so these photos are too, but just as I tell where they came from, I'd appreciate if you'd say who :)

Weird they would have an ATM next to a lingerie shop in Victoria British Columbia, but they do.

代官山

洋品店の店先で見つけました。

 

View of three men and a boy standing in front of a bakery.

 

Digital Collection:

North Carolina Postcards

 

Date:

1912

 

Location:

Hickory (N.C.); Catawba County (N.C.);

 

Collection in Repository

Durwood Barbour Collection of North Carolina Postcards (P077); collection guide available

online at www.lib.unc.edu/ncc/pcoll/77barbour/77barbour.html

 

Usage Statement

Short North Arts District - Columbus, OH

There aren't many old storefronts left on Kingsway out in Burnaby. But the street still holds some surprises. I found these ones just East of Metrotown.

This was a Hallmark cards store. If I am not mistaken this was originally Elmars Restaurant.

 

The Lincoln Park Shopping Center opened in 1957 as one of the Detroit Area's largest shopping centers. The Sears opened the previous year and was once the top grossing Sears store. In the 2000s the shopping center became mostly empty besides Dollar Tree, Sears, and a Big Boy Restaurant on an out-parcel. Plans for a Walmart to open at the shopping center fell through twice.

 

If you want to use this photo please contact me (Nicholas Eckhart) in one of the following ways:

 

>Send a FlickrMail message

>Comment on the photo(s)

>Send an email to eckhartnicholas@yahoo.com

On Madison Street in Two Bridges / Chinatown neighborhood.

Downtown Lakeport, CA!

WEEK 31 – Hernando Kroger

 

In the last pic you saw the Delta Division millennium-style exterior build of the store; here we’re looking a little closer at the right-hand side of it, where some kiddie carts are, as well as the fuel prices sign and a bench full of advertisements.

 

Re: what spurred me to finally upload pictures from here… mainly it’s because I’ve wanted to link to so many photos from this store as comparison shots, only to realize I haven’t uploaded them yet!!

 

(c) 2016 Retail Retell

These places are public so these photos are too, but just as I tell where they came from, I'd appreciate if you'd say who :)

Taken at a small shop in Cape Charles Virginia.

Taken on June 16, 2018 in Worcester, MA.

Olympus E5 & Contax Zeiss 50 f1.7 Copyright Wayne Kryka

A green porcelain enamel storefront in New Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.

 

While putting this photo on the map I saw that I had been to New Bethlehem once before, in November 2012. I took a photo of an orange enameled storefront but otherwise have no memory of visiting the town. That orange storefront was gone by 2015, and now looks like this, which is a big reason why I take all these pictures of small town buildings.

Fuji Superia 800

Promaster 2500PK, Promaster 50mm f/1.7

Pakon F135+

 

January 2017

Yesterday, we were livestreaming our walk around the Lower East Side to highlight some of the wonderful small businesses in the neighborhood and captured this scene of the burning of Joss paper outside a Chinese grocery store. Joss paper also known as incense papers are papercrafts or sheets of paper made into burnt offerings common in Chinese ancestral worship (such as the veneration of the deceased family members and relatives on holidays and special occasions). Joss paper is also used for worship of deities in Chinese folk religion.

To watch our livestream walk around the Lower East Side & Little Italy to help support small businesses, please check out our YouTube channel. Direct link below:

youtu.be/ll87j8Syzeo

 

#storefront #chinatownnyc #storefronts #momandpopshop #momandpopshops #chinese #chineseculture #josspaper #chinatown #chinatownnyc #chinatownmarket #grocerystore #ancestralworship #papercrafts

   

We love ❤️ this diner's wrap-around #neon signage as well as its vertical #neonsign and the architecture of the building it is located in. Does anyone else remember this #luncheonette as it closed a number of years ago and we found this #analog photo in our 35mm archives.

 

A storefront somewhere in Marin County, California.

Storefront of the defunct Bookbinder's Restaurant at 125 Walnut Street in the Old City area of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Mom and Pop store on a side street.

www.vogue.com/article/jamesandkarla-instagram-new-york-ci...

 

Article includes: @Ray'sCandyStore, @scarrspizza, @Regina'sGrocery and more!

 

"It’s true that most of their photos could be lumped into the category of “Old New York”—a designation dwellers use to describe previous iterations of this ever-changing city—but the whole point, James and Karla say, is to remind people that these stores are very much here in the present. “We just try to raise awareness of the joys of these little shops,” James says. “We want people to be aware of how important they are to the fabric of the community. And if they shop there—because that’s the key to the stores success, they need customers—you can actively do something to keep them in business.”

These are storefront slipcover models at 1.5 inch to 1 foot scale that Pittco salesman would take across the country to sell their products and designs.

A long empty storefront in East Liverpool, Ohio. According to the East Liverpool Historical Society this was the Diamond Frank Men's Clothing store in 1958/59.

A trip to the Copshaholm Concours d'Elegance in South Bend, Indiana afforded me the opportunity to take some photos in the rural northeast part of the state. Howe is a tiny town a few miles south of the Michigan border at the edge of Amish country. This row of colorful storefronts caught my eye as I was passing through town on August 10, 2018.

 

View my collections on flickr here: Collections

 

Press "L" for a larger image on black.

Lower Manhattan, New York City.

in Port Townsend, Washington.

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