Showing 13–24 of 25 results
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$25.00
Only in Fremont. Every neighborhood has a landmark. Fremont has a 16-foot bronze Soviet revolutionary — and at some point someone decided he needed a tutu. Tutu Vlad has worn many things since arriving in this neighborhood in 1995 — holiday lights, Santa hats, protest signs. But nothing captures the Fremont spirit quite like a…
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$25.00
Since forever. Still here. Still proud. Long before Pride was a marketing campaign, Capitol Hill was doing the actual work. This neighborhood sheltered Seattle’s LGBTQ+ community through the AIDS crisis, through the hate crimes, through the decades when being out in public was an act of courage rather than a lifestyle choice. The bars weren’t…
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$25.00
Some walks you never forget. This is one of them. A father and daughter stroll the Alki Beach shoreline, the Seattle skyline rising across the water behind them. Rendered in woodcut-style linework, this design captures the quiet magic of Seattle’s most beloved waterfront — the herons, the waves, the city in the distance, and the…
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$25.00
A bridge, a padlock, a promise. The iconic Love Locks fence at Alki Point, rendered in woodcut-style linework with the Seattle skyline beyond the water. A West Seattle landmark where people have marked moments that matter — anniversaries, friendships, farewells, and fresh starts. For everyone who has ever left a little piece of themselves on…
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$25.00
A former coal gasification plant on Lake Union, decommissioned in 1956 and turned into one of the country’s first post-industrial parks. A designated Seattle landmark and on the National Register of Historic Places. The city is currently removing the towers’ ladders and catwalks over the objections of preservation advocates — bypassing the Landmarks Preservation Board…
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$25.00
Every neighborhood has a landmark. Ours has the Volunteer Park water tower — standing above the Victorians and the apartment buildings and the coffee shops and the bars, watching the Hill change and stay the same all at once. For anyone who’s ever called Capitol Hill home. Designed in Seattle. Wholesale orders printed in Seattle….
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$25.00
You either know, or you don’t. Nobody who’s actually from here calls it “Cap Hill.” That’s the tell. The instant someone says “Cap Hill” you know they’re treating this neighborhood like a lifestyle accessory rather than a home. To everyone who belongs to this place — who’s walked Broadway at 2am, who remembers when Pike/Pine…
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$25.00
The view that makes locals stop every time. There’s a moment every Capitol Hill regular knows — standing at Volunteer Park, looking through the sculpture toward the Space Needle, Elliott Bay, and the Olympics beyond. The cherry blossoms in bloom. The rainbow breaking through. This is that moment. Volunteer Park has anchored Capitol Hill since…
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$25.00
This bold graphic tee features the iconic Montlake Bridge raised in full drawbridge glory, a racing shell cutting through below, and the words “Möntlake Crüe” arched overhead in heavy blackletter script. Original artwork, Seattle-made attitude. Printed on a soft unisex tee. True to size. Available in multiple colors. Original artwork by The Town Threads Unisex…
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$25.00
Same neighborhood. Different mood. The cream ink colorway gives the Möntlake Crüe its after-dark edge — the Montlake Bridge raised wide, a racing shell cutting through below, blackletter script arched overhead like a band logo from your favorite record. Original artwork printed on a dark unisex tee. Made for the rowers, the night owls, the…
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$25.00
Old school. No shortcuts. This woodcut-style graphic puts you right on the water — four rowers driving through the Montlake Cut, the bridge arching overhead, evergreens framing the banks, and Rainier rising behind it all. Crossed oars up top like a coat of arms for everyone who’s ever touched a blade on this stretch of…
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$25.00
This is Montlake Elementary as generations of students knew it — the original brick building that stood at the heart of this small, tight-knit Seattle neighborhood from 1924 until its renovation in the mid-2020s. The arched windows. The stone steps. The twin entrances where thousands of Montlake kids started their mornings for over sixty years….