View allAll Photos Tagged coffeeshops
Iced Cocoa. Milk Coffee. Passion Fruit Juice. In a very small and quiet and white and bright and soft and tender coffee shop.
I like this shot because it shows the slanting shelf in the background. This shop has been open for over 50 years and they're probably still using the same furniture. :) Its still run by the same family that started it.
Its located in the alley behind the Hon Ming Textile Company above which dad used to live.
我对咖啡其实并不狂热。只不过是加奶的多少以及杯子的大小而已,喜欢闻咖啡的味道胜于喝咖啡。咖啡是酸,是涩,是苦,于我都不重要,但对喝咖啡的环境必定百般挑剔。我所喜爱的,是无拘无束畅所欲言的咖啡馆,但绝不能吵杂八卦。阳光能照到沙发,空气松弛明柔,思绪可以在暖色调的天花板上飘飘荡荡。主人要有品位,播放的音乐,室内的装潢,以及售卖的食物至少得到能获得80%的认同。只是魔都人民为了生存,咖啡馆遍地开花,挤破脑袋变花样,手工咖啡馆,猫咪咖啡馆,淘宝咖啡馆,电影咖啡馆。。。。。。咖啡馆卖的已经不是咖啡。
Un caótico Coffeeshop en Amsterdam de hace unos años
More information abou rights and larger sizes / Más información sobre derechos y tamaños grandes en: www.safecreative.org/work/0903222803100
The Bulldog Coffeeshop
Oudezijds Voorburgwal
Amsterdam
The photographs in this album were taken during research visits to Amsterdam, 2017-18. This is not a complete or planned collection, but rather, a selection of random shots which were taken when I noticed coffeeshops on my travels around the city.
For information on the project itself, see the website dedicated to the book:
Coffeeshop Relax
Binnen Oranjestraat
Amsterdam
The photographs in this album were taken during research visits to Amsterdam, 2017-18. This is not a complete or planned collection, but rather, a selection of random shots which were taken when I noticed coffeeshops on my travels around the city.
For information on the project itself, see the website dedicated to the book:
Somewhere in SoHo we found this great coffeeshop and stopped for lunch (large melted cheese sandwiches - win). Their modish grey wall made a cool portrait backdrop.
Coffeeshops are establishments in the Netherlands where the sale of cannabis for personal consumption by the public is tolerated by the local authorities (in Dutch called gedoogbeleid).
Under the drug policy of the Netherlands, the sale of cannabis products in small quantities is allowed by 'licensed' coffee shops. The majority of these "coffeeshops" (in Dutch written as one word) also serve drinks and food. Coffeeshops are not allowed to serve alcohol (although in the past some coffeeshops in central Amsterdam have transgressed this law without reproach) or other drugs, and risk closure if they are found to be selling soft drugs to minors, hard drugs or selling alcohol without a license. The idea of coffeeshops was introduced in the 1970s for the explicit purpose of keeping hard and soft drugs separated.
In the Netherlands, 105 of the 443 municipalities have at least one coffeeshop. Many at the borders sell mostly to foreigners (mostly from Belgium, Germany and France), who can also buy marijuana in their own countries, but prefer the legality and higher product quality of Dutch coffeeshops. In May 2011 the Dutch confirmed plans to ban foreigners from patronizing coffee shops, and to roll out the policy in the southern provinces of Limburg, Noord Brabant and Zeeland by the end of 2011 and the rest of the country in 2012. Coffeeshops become members-only clubs, while only adults living in the Netherlands can become a member.
Dutch coffee houses not serving marijuana are called koffiehuis (literally "coffee house"), while a café is the equivalent of a bar. [Wikipedia.org]