View allAll Photos Tagged empmuseum
www.empmuseum.org/ EMP Museum
325 5th Avenue N
Seattle, WA 98109
My Camera broke right when we got to Seattle, all these pictures I took using my sisters little camera. They turned out better then I expected!
www.empmuseum.org/ EMP Museum
325 5th Avenue N
Seattle, WA 98109
My Camera broke right when we got to Seattle, all these pictures I took using my sisters little camera. They turned out better then I expected!
There are better pictures on the web of the Blade Runner car. What a difference to see this in the day light than in the dark, rainy, neon highlights of a dystopian future. The Experience Music Project (EMP) Museum is something to see. Someone put in a lot of effort to make a building worthy of exploring every staircase, every corridor, every doorway... It took me an hour to find the exhibit I was seeking.
www.empmuseum.org/ EMP Museum
325 5th Avenue N
Seattle, WA 98109
My Camera broke right when we got to Seattle, all these pictures I took using my sisters little camera. They turned out better then I expected!
www.empmuseum.org/ EMP Museum
325 5th Avenue N
Seattle, WA 98109
My Camera broke right when we got to Seattle, all these pictures I took using my sisters little camera. They turned out better then I expected!
www.empmuseum.org/ EMP Museum
325 5th Avenue N
Seattle, WA 98109
My Camera broke right when we got to Seattle, all these pictures I took using my sisters little camera. They turned out better then I expected!
I only watched the first Narnia movie and didn't care for it, so I never bothered to watch the others (BBC MINISERIES FTW), buttttttt you gotta have respect for Susan's totes rad bow and arrows from Santa Claus, amirite?
www.empmuseum.org/ EMP Museum
325 5th Avenue N
Seattle, WA 98109
My Camera broke right when we got to Seattle, all these pictures I took using my sisters little camera. They turned out better then I expected!
...from the original series Star Trek is mostly made of wood, and bits of electronic switches taken from an old Hammond organ. Note the Tribbles cast about. Again, because it was behind thick acrylic, I will use that as my excuse for not getting a better picture.
In honor of my father's birthday (and the day Neil Armstrong stepped out on the moon... allegedly), I took in the Icons of Science Fiction exhibit. The posters were all over Seattle and had me convinced that it was, like the model of the Sentinel from the Matrix, much bigger than it turned out to be in real life. The exhibit was hidden in the bowels of the EMP museum basement, sharing the space with an exhibit on Horror films (which was also pretty good). I learned something from that exhibit (and from the Special Features on The Crazies DVD): Post production is where the magic really happens.