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Showing results for "Community Business"

Pattie Deitz, owner of Pattie's Home Plate Café, sits across from her best friend Jenny at a wooden table in her eclectic North Portland restaurant. The warm fluorescent lighting illuminates scattered papers and a yellow menu holder between them, while the cluttered, homey interior filled with collectibles and memorabilia creates an intimate backdrop. Their relaxed conversation captures the intersection of friendship and small business ownership in the Saint Johns neighborhood.
Pattie Deitz (right) shares a moment with her best friend Jenny in her Saint Johns restaurant, Pattie's Home Plate Café on North Lombard Street.
Friendship and Business in Saint Johns
A
The weathered brick facade of Good Taste Restaurant anchors a corner in Portland's historic Chinatown district, its bilingual signage promising authentic Chinese cuisine beneath golden Chinese characters. Red columns frame the storefront while colorful menu displays peek through windows, creating an inviting gateway to culinary tradition. The urban streetscape reveals the intersection of heritage and commerce, where traditional ornate lamp posts stand sentinel beside modern waste receptacles on the quiet sidewalk.
Good Taste Restaurant displays bilingual signage along Northwest Everett Street in Portland's Chinatown-Japantown Historic District.
Good Taste Restaurant in Portland Chinatown
C
Weathered wooden storefronts along Southeast Division Street display contrasting pandemic-era murals beneath overhanging maple branches. The left mural promotes hygiene with "KEEP it CLEAN" messaging and sanitizer imagery, while the right celebrates local resilience with "CAT'S PAW Stay Strong Portland We Love You" in bold lettering. A security grate protects the central entrance at address 3565, creating an urban tableau of community solidarity and public health awareness.
Pandemic-themed murals adorn the facade of Cat's Paw Saloon on Southeast Division Street in Portland's Richmond neighborhood.
Portland Street Art During Pandemic Times
B
Restaurant owner Pattie Deitz sits alongside her best friend Jenny at a worn wooden table in Pattie's Home Plate Café in Portland's Saint Johns neighborhood. The intimate portrait captures the warmth of longtime friendship against the bustling backdrop of the eclectic eatery, where cluttered shelves overflow with collectibles, flowers, and memorabilia. Soft fluorescent lighting bathes the scene as the two women pause from their daily routines, newspapers and coffee cups scattered before them.
Pattie Deitz (right), owner of Pattie's Home Plate Café, shares a quiet moment with her best friend Jenny in her Saint Johns restaurant.
Friends At The Counter
A
Mike Knight and Arthur Ruckle examine vintage cameras with practiced expertise inside Blue Moon Camera & Machine on North Lombard Street in Portland's Saint Johns neighborhood. Knight, wearing a crisp white shirt and blue tie, handles camera lenses while Ruckle, distinguished in a denim shirt and glasses, inspects a classic camera body. The warm interior lighting illuminates shelves lined with an impressive collection of vintage cameras and equipment, creating an atmosphere of craftsmanship and mechanical precision. Their focused collaboration speaks to decades of shared passion for analog photography and the careful curation that defines this beloved Portland institution.
Mike Knight and Arthur Ruckle of Blue Moon Camera & Machine inspect newly arrived cameras for consignment sales in their Saint Johns shop.
Camera Shop Consultation in Portland
B
A snow-dusted sidewalk frames the former Cruzroom restaurant on Northeast Alberta Street in Portland's Concordia neighborhood. The modern storefront features a striking combination of charcoal horizontal siding and warm wood accents, with large windows now displaying a prominent "FOR LEASE" sign from Yacher Group. The winter scene captures the quiet transition of urban commercial spaces, with bare trees and parked cars visible through the building's reflective glass facade.
The former Cruzroom restaurant space stands empty with a for-lease sign prominently displayed in its window along Northeast Alberta Street in Portland's Concordia neighborhood.
Winter Vacancy on Northeast Alberta Street
B
Inside the warm, rustic interior of Music Millennium on East Burnside during Record Store Day 2022, a masked clerk in a gray trucker cap and plaid flannel shirt processes a transaction with a tattooed customer. Exposed wooden beams frame the scene while vinyl records and merchandise create an authentic record store atmosphere. Natural light streams through windows, illuminating this intimate moment of independent retail commerce in Portland's Kerns neighborhood.
A customer completes a purchase at Music Millennium record store on East Burnside Street in Portland, Oregon during Record Store Day 2022.
Record Store Day Transaction in Portland
B
Pattie Deitz, owner of Pattie's Home Plate Café in Portland's Saint Johns neighborhood, shares an intimate moment with her best friend Jenny across a worn wooden table scattered with papers and coffee cups. The fluorescent-lit interior reveals a treasure trove of craft supplies, vintage collectibles, and homewares that transform this North Lombard Street establishment into more than just a restaurant. Their genuine connection radiates warmth against the backdrop of organized chaos that defines this beloved community gathering place.
Pattie Deitz (right) and her best friend Jenny enjoy conversation at Pattie's Home Plate Café on North Lombard Street in Portland's Saint Johns neighborhood.
Friends Connect at Saint Johns Café
A
A custom-built wooden takeout station reveals the adaptive spirit of Portland's Eliot neighborhood during COVID-19. Two service windows frame 'ORDER' and 'PICK-UP' signage against a backdrop of eclectic street art featuring skulls, cartoon characters, and vibrant murals. Hand-lettered menus and community notices paper the interior surfaces, while winter trees glimpse through the glass, capturing the intimate resilience of local restaurant culture during unprecedented times.
Lottie and Zula's converted takeout counter showcases Portland's restaurant adaptation during the COVID-19 pandemic in the Eliot neighborhood.
Pandemic Pivot at Lottie and Zula's
B
A wet sidewalk scene captures the vibrant character of Portland's Alberta Street, where the Random Order Pie Bar anchors a block of colorful storefronts and street art. Overcast skies cast even light across the rain-dampened pavement, while vintage lampposts and power lines create urban rhythms above. Sticker-covered utility boxes and weathered signage speak to the neighborhood's artistic spirit and community energy.
Random Order Pie Bar stands among the eclectic mix of businesses that define Portland's Alberta Street corridor.
Alberta Street's Eclectic Urban Character
B
A vibrant community mural adorns the boarded windows of a closed business on Southeast Hawthorne Boulevard in Portland's Richmond neighborhood. The artwork features two portrait figures flanking a central mandala design with the message 'YOU ME WE' prominently displayed, transforming urban decay into a canvas for connection and hope. The red brick facade creates a striking backdrop against the overcast Pacific Northwest sky, while street signs and utility poles frame this intersection of abandonment and artistic resilience.
A colorful mural proclaiming unity covers the boarded storefront of a shuttered business in Portland's Richmond district.
Unity Mural on Shuttered Richmond Storefront
B
A cyclist in bright pink shoes pedals past a row of plywood-covered storefronts on Southeast Hawthorne Boulevard in Portland's Richmond neighborhood. Colorful graffiti tags sprawl across the orange and brown boards protecting the vacant businesses, while a pedestrian walks along the sidewalk under overcast skies. The scene captures the intersection of urban resilience and economic disruption in this historically vibrant commercial district.
A cyclist navigates Southeast Hawthorne Boulevard past graffiti-tagged plywood barriers protecting shuttered businesses in Portland's Richmond neighborhood.
Cycling Past Boarded Storefronts on Hawthorne
B
Mike Knight and Arthur Ruckle examine vintage cameras amid the organized chaos of Blue Moon Camera & Machine's Portland storefront. Warm tungsten light bathes the ornate tin ceiling and illuminates rows of meticulously arranged vintage cameras displayed on glass shelves, while hundreds of lenses carpet the floor below. The two specialists lean over their inspection table in focused collaboration, surrounded by decades of photographic history in this legendary Pearl District camera shop.
Camera specialists Mike Knight and Arthur Ruckle evaluate newly arrived equipment at Blue Moon Camera & Machine in Portland, Oregon.
Camera Connoisseurs at Blue Moon Portland
B
A custom-built takeout station integrates seamlessly into the main entrance of Lottie and Zula's restaurant in Portland's Eliot neighborhood, flanked by bright yellow Oregonian newspaper boxes. The purposefully constructed wooden counter, adorned with vibrant street art featuring skulls and psychedelic patterns, bears witness to the restaurant industry's adaptive spirit during COVID-19. Behind rain-streaked windows, the darkened interior hints at a business transformed, while menu boards and pickup instructions create an improvised commerce hub on the sidewalk.
A custom-built outdoor pickup counter integrated into Lottie and Zula's restaurant entrance showcases the food service industry's pandemic adaptations.
Custom Pickup Counter at Lottie and Zula's
B
A custom-built takeout counter transforms the main entrance of Lottie and Zula's restaurant in Portland's Eliot neighborhood during the COVID-19 pandemic. Bright yellow newspaper stands flank a colorful graffiti-adorned storefront, where handwritten menus are taped to windows beside bold "ORDER" and "PICK-UP" signage. The purpose-built counter installation captures the resourceful spirit of local businesses pivoting to survive, with overcast winter light filtering through bare trees reflected in the glass facade.
Lottie and Zula's restaurant in Portland's Eliot neighborhood installed a custom-built takeout counter in their main entrance during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Custom Takeout Counter at Lottie and Zula's
B
A woman in a camel coat and plaid skirt walks past a charming French boulangerie on Portland's Northeast Alberta Street. Golden morning light washes the scene, creating a warm glow against the dark navy storefront with its elegant gilt lettering. The intimate street-level composition captures the quiet rhythm of neighborhood life, with wrought iron cafe tables awaiting the day's first customers.
A pedestrian passes a French bakery during golden hour on Northeast Alberta Street in Portland's Vernon neighborhood.
Morning Stroll Past Portland Boulangerie
A
A woman in a bright pink bikini top and dark shorts cycles past her cargo bicycle on Southeast Hawthorne Boulevard in Portland, her back to the camera as she moves along a storefront adorned with vibrant geometric murals in warm sunset hues. The juxtaposition of her summer attire against the backdrop of early pandemic business closures captures a moment of personal freedom amid the uncertainty of COVID-19 lockdowns. Industrial pendant lights hang from the mint-green building facade, while parked cars and power lines stretch toward distant mountains under an overcast Pacific Northwest sky.
A cyclist moves along Southeast Hawthorne Boulevard in Portland, where colorful murals brighten shuttered storefronts at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic and lockdown.
Cycling past boarded up businesses on Southeast Hawthorne Boulevard at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic and lockdown
B
A vibrant hand-illustrated poster advertising Record Store Day 2022 stands prominently on a wooden easel inside Music Millennium, Portland's iconic independent record shop on East Burnside. The colorful artwork features whimsical characters in a psychedelic living room scene with floating UFOs and musical elements, embodying the creative spirit of vinyl culture. Behind the poster, the warm glow of pendant lighting illuminates rows of vinyl records and a masked customer browsing the collection, capturing the intimate atmosphere of this beloved neighborhood music sanctuary in the Kerns district.
A Record Store Day 2022 poster displays psychedelic artwork at Music Millennium, Portland's legendary independent record store on East Burnside Street.
Record Store Day 2022 Celebration in Portland
B
The iconic Caffe Vita Coffee Roasting Company neon sign pierces through a heavy fog on Alberta Street in Portland's Concordia neighborhood. The vintage-style sign features a whimsical figure holding a coffee cup, rendered in electric blue and white neon, while red lettering spells out the cafe's name below. Bare winter tree branches frame the left side of the composition as the atmospheric haze transforms the nighttime street into a dreamlike urban tableau.
Caffe Vita's neon sign glows through fog on Northeast Alberta Street in Portland's Concordia district.
Neon Glow Through Alberta Street Fog
B
Inside the cozy confines of Pattie's Home Plate Café in Saint Johns, Portland, a woman in a cream cable-knit sweater pours steaming coffee from a glass carafe for two elderly patrons seated at a worn wooden counter. The men, one wearing a baseball cap and the other in a green plaid flannel shirt, wait patiently as warm light illuminates the cluttered, lived-in interior filled with shelves of collectibles and everyday café paraphernalia. The scene captures the intimate ritual of neighborhood hospitality in this beloved Portland community gathering place.
A server pours fresh coffee for regular customers at the counter of Pattie's Home Plate Café in Saint Johns, Portland, Oregon.
Morning Coffee at Pattie's Home Plate Café
A
Restaurant owner Pattie Deitz sits across from her best friend Jenny at a worn wooden table in the heart of her bustling North Portland café. The fluorescent-lit interior reveals decades of community gathering, with shelves packed with vintage collectibles, costume jewelry, and local memorabilia creating an intimate backdrop. Scattered paperwork and menus rest between them as they share a quiet moment amid the organized chaos of this beloved Saint Johns neighborhood institution.
Pattie Deitz, owner of Pattie's Home Plate Café in Saint Johns, shares conversation with her best friend Jenny surrounded by the eclectic décor of her North Portland restaurant.
Friends Share Stories at Saint Johns Café
A
A provocative stencil graffiti piece adorns weathered plywood covering a boarded storefront on Southeast Hawthorne Boulevard in Portland's Richmond neighborhood. The artwork depicts Donald Trump wearing Mickey Mouse ears with the bold declaration "you are fired" and "vote nov 3rd" beneath, rendered in stark black against the warm coral-toned wood grain. Natural light illuminates the urban commentary, highlighting both the texture of the protective boarding and the anonymous artist's political statement during what appears to be election season.
Political street art combines Disney iconography with electoral messaging on a boarded business in Portland's Richmond district.
Fired Donald Trump Mickey Mouse Graffiti
B
The weathered checkerboard linoleum tells stories beneath the gentle hum of ceiling fans at Pattie's Home Plate Café in Portland's Saint Johns neighborhood. Regulars occupy their familiar stations—a man in a lime safety vest studies his newspaper at the counter while others settle into red vinyl booths bathed in soft fluorescent light. The diner's lived-in atmosphere speaks to decades of community gathering, where morning coffee and conversation flow as predictably as the Oregon rain outside the storefront windows.
Patrons enjoy their morning routine at the iconic Pattie's Home Plate Café in Portland's Saint Johns district.
Morning Rituals at Pattie's Home Plate Café
A
Two film lab technicians work in concentrated silence within the intimate confines of Blue Moon Camera & Machine in Portland's Saint Johns neighborhood. A woman with curly hair in a teal sweater sits at a processing station surrounded by hanging film strips, while her colleague in a mustard cardigan examines prints at the counter. The cramped workspace pulses with the quiet intensity of analog craftsmanship, fluorescent light casting clinical precision over rows of negatives and the accumulated ephemera of photographic tradition.
Technicians process film at Blue Moon Camera & Machine in Portland's Saint Johns district, continuing the tradition of analog photography in the digital age.
Film Lab Technicians at Blue Moon Camera
B
Inside Music Millennium on East Burnside during Record Store Day 2022, a masked clerk in glasses and a gray t-shirt processes a customer's purchase at the checkout counter. The intimate record store setting features handwritten new release boards advertising vinyl from artists like Dr. Dog and Kurt Vile, while shelves packed with albums and merchandise create a cozy backdrop. Warm interior lighting illuminates the exchange between the two men as physical media changes hands in this enduring bastion of music culture during the annual celebration of independent record stores.
A customer completes his purchase at Music Millennium record store during Record Store Day 2022 in Portland's Kerns neighborhood.
Record Store Day 2022 Transaction at Portland Shop
B
Inside the cramped, vinyl-lined confines of Music Millennium on Portland's East Burnside during Record Store Day 2022, a masked employee in glasses and a gray t-shirt processes a transaction at the cluttered counter. The customer, partially visible from behind, reaches for his purchase while surrounded by towering shelves of records and memorabilia. A handwritten "New Releases" board dominates the background, its red lettering announcing upcoming albums including works by Jack White and Kurt Vile, creating an authentic snapshot of independent record store culture during the annual celebration of vinyl.
A customer completes his purchase at the counter of Music Millennium record store in Portland's Kerns neighborhood during Record Store Day 2022.
Record Store Day 2022 Transaction at Music Millennium
B
A striking emerald green wooden building houses Microcosm Publishing Store on North Williams Avenue in Portland's historically significant Eliot neighborhood. The rustic metal lettering spelling "BOOKSTORE" crowns the structure's upper balcony, while weathered wood siding and purple accents create an eclectic bohemian atmosphere. A public pay phone stands beside the entrance, embodying the grassroots community spirit of this Albina district establishment.
Microcosm Publishing Store's distinctive green facade stands as a beacon of independent literature in Portland's evolving Eliot neighborhood.
Vibrant Green Bookstore in Portland's Eliot District
C
Two young women browse vintage records outside Music Millennium, Portland's iconic record store on East Burnside Street. The afternoon light casts gentle shadows across the sidewalk as one woman in a flowing dress examines vinyl while her companion watches from the doorway. The scene captures the enduring appeal of physical music media against the backdrop of Portland's eclectic Kerns neighborhood, where colorful storefronts and tree-lined streets create an authentic urban village atmosphere.
Customers explore vinyl records at Music Millennium on East Burnside Street in Portland's Kerns neighborhood during a sunny afternoon shopping excursion.
Record Store Discovery on Burnside Street
C
A vibrant street art-covered takeout window serves as the main entrance to Lottie and Zula's restaurant in Portland's Eliot neighborhood during the COVID-19 pandemic. Flanked by bright yellow Oregonian newspaper boxes, the colorful custom-built order window features psychedelic murals of skulls and cartoon characters, while handwritten menus on kraft paper frame the glass opening. The overcast afternoon light filters through bare winter branches, casting a subdued atmosphere over this adaptive pandemic streetscape.
Lottie and Zula's custom-built takeout window in Portland's Eliot district showcases pandemic-era restaurant adaptation with street art and outdoor service.
Custom Takeout Window at Portland Restaurant
B
In the intimate confines of Blue Moon Camera & Machine, Portland's legendary camera haven, Mike Knight and a colleague work with reverent concentration behind a gleaming glass counter. The warm tungsten light illuminates their careful examination of vintage equipment while towering displays of classic cameras—from twin-lens reflex models to large format view cameras—create a museum-like backdrop. The scene captures the quiet dedication of analog photography's guardians, their focused gestures speaking to decades of expertise amid this treasure trove of mechanical precision.
Mike Knight (right) and a colleague examine vintage cameras behind the counter at Blue Moon Camera & Machine in Portland, Oregon.
Craftsmen Among Vintage Cameras in Portland Shop
B

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