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    الأحد، 18 يونيو 2017

    Unusual And Historical Prints San Francisco Collectors Recommend

    By Susan King


    Millions of tourists visit Northern California every year. Most of them buy mementos of their time in its City By the Bay to take home with them. It is not unusual for these visitors to purchase affordable artwork of some iconic landmarks that distinguish the city. Many choose views depicting the Golden Gate Bridge while others opt for the more unusual, but equally distinctive historical prints San Francisco collectors prefer.

    If you were lucky enough to dine at the Cliff House during your visit to this city, you might want to take a visual memento of this famous, and some would argue infamous, restaurant back to show friends and family. You may know the story about the gingerbread house precariously perched above Ocean Beach, but your friends probably won't.

    The Sutro Baths no longer exist, but you can visit the remains just north of Cliff House. The mining engineer and one time mayor of San Francisco, Adolph Sutro, had a vision for a bathhouse where the public could come to exercise and socialize in style. The product of this vision became the biggest indoor swimming facility in the world. In its heyday, there were seven heated pools, paintings, history exhibits, and Egyptian mummies. The only way to enjoy it today is in a photograph.

    Food is one thing this city is rightly famous for. If you spent time at the local markets, you could purchase a print of Market Street bustling with trolley cars and horse drawn carriages circa 1900. The famous Flat Iron Building is front and center in many of these pictures.

    Mark Hopkins' Mansion is now a luxury hotel, and if you were fortunate enough to spend the night there, you couldn't help but notice the photos of its time as a private residence. It was controversial in its day with many citizens repulsed by its gaudy vulgarity, but others admired its impressive size. Although fire gutted it in 1906, it lives on in black and white photography.

    Emperor Norton was one of this city's most colorful characters, and people still seem fascinated with him today. Upon proclaiming himself the Emperor of the United States, this beloved character ate at the finest restaurants and enjoyed the best theater seats all for free. He issued curious decrees and proclamations throughout his twenty-one year reign.

    There are numerous prints depicting the aftermath of the horrific earthquake of 1906 and the many fires that raged through the streets afterward. It may not be what San Franciscans want tourists to take away with them, but the photos are interesting and sobering. The Call Building and City Hall scenes are particularly striking.

    This City By the Bay is beloved by many, and it has a unique cultural and architectural history with pivotal moments created by natural disasters. Pictures of its Golden Gate Bridge abound and are beautiful. It is interesting to see some lesser known photos though that give a real sense of this city's golden past.




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