“NO FOOD FINER”
George’s Diner
Clarkson Diner
If you click for the larger view, you can see a Bell Telephone sign, a Schaefer Beer sign, the name Clarkson, and several blurry pedestrians.
T SIDE and WEST SID
I chose these photographs for the signage and for the fellow who appears to be iceskating his way into the frame.
Chamois chop suey
It’s like something from the world of Julius Knipl, Real Estate Photographer.
Needle & Thread Grill
With spindles, a spinning wheel, and a loom (?) in the window.
Zoom!
I found this photograph by chance (swear), closing my eyes and clicking the mouse. Was the photographer more deliberate, wanting to catch this car in motion? Or did the driver just zoom into the frame?
Kids making the scene
What happened one day on 38th Street: those three kids followed the photographers down (or up) the block. These kids would not be denied, though I doubt that anyone was trying to deny them.
Ladies & Gents Restaurant
In Manhattan, next to the Fat Men’s Shop.
Jack’s Diner
I like seeing a diner wherever there’s space for one.
Recently updated
The House of Pets, now with added mayhem.
Animal house
Walk down Flatbush Avenue from (what I’ve dubbed) the Leaning Tower of Brooklyn, and you woul have found The House of Pets, aka Altman’s Long Island Bird Store. With scenes of animal mayhem.
The Leaning Tower of Brooklyn
The camera angle makes this corner look like the Leaning Tower of Brooklyn, but in truth it’s the tip of an triangle bounded by Flatbush Avenue (to the left), Ashland Place (to the right), and Lafayette Avenue (out of sight).
Recently updated
A photo with an electric delivery-truck. Another Hopper Zippy.
Just some diner?
A diner, a delivery truck, a radio show.
Neon in semi-daylight
4920 New Utrecht Avenue: I chose this photograph for its neon in semi-daylight, vivid in the shadow of the El. The band of light between the El and the buildings looks itself a bit like neon, or at least like fluorescence.
Empire of signs
In Columbus Circle.
Recently updated
A lost Clipper: now with 1950s film footage of the strangely shallow building on Doyers Street.
A lost Clipper
The China Clipper Restaurant and the mysterious disappearance of its owner.
A New Utrecht address
I wonder if anyone who isn’t reading this post knows of the tragedy that visited this address just over a century ago.
Schrafft’s, plural
Looking for the Schrafft’s where my mom and dad may have eaten lunch.
Louis Armstrong’s house
Louis Armstrong was born on August 4, 1901. He and his wife Lucille bought this house in Corona, Queens, in 1943. It was Armstrong’s home for the rest of his life.
Childs
Childs restaurants were once ubiquitous in New York.
Recently updated
Mott Street, in July, now with a passage from The WPA Guide to New York City. And pizza.
Mott Street, in July
With pushcarts.
On old Delancey Street
These storefronts are in fact 191 and 193 Bowery. But let’s imagine them on Delancey Street, nos. 6 and 8.
“Swims clings or crawls”
“If it swims clings or crawls we have it”: Brooklyn signage.
Apples?
A fruit stand on a Manhattan street.
O Pioneer!
The Pioneer Restaurant makes a brief appearance in A.J. Liebling's “Bowery Boom.”
SIGNS
The Half Moon Hotel and other signs.