A few white walls on a sunny shadowy day.
A metal wall with peeling paint and a few rust spots… and then add an old basketball hoop to the composition.
In the spotlight, spotlight, spotlight, spotlight… and on camera too?
Twig and texture
Another blog post constructed from the wanderings around a neighbourhood.
below: A bronze plaque erected by the East York Historical Society is mounted on the stone fence of the Taylor Cemetery which is adjacent to Don Mills United Church. The plaque mentions the Methodist Church – the Methodists became part of the United Church in 1925.

The Taylor Cemetery – John Taylor (1773-1868), his wife Margaret Hawthorne and seven children emigrated from Uttoxeter Staffordshire in 1821. In 1839, three sons, John, Thomas, and George, purchased this land from Samuel Sinclair (1767-1852) except for a portion Sinclair gave to the Primitive Methodist Connexion in 1851. The Taylors gave the Connexion a brick church in 1859. The family operated three paper mills and a brick mill in the Don Valley, where they had considerable landholdings and were responsible for much of the development of East York in the nineteenth century.
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below: The present church building dates from 1950 when a smaller building was demolished. This church was registered in 1819 and has been on this site since 1839 (as mentioned above, originally Methodist).
below: Close by is Holy Cross Roman Catholic Church. Established in 1928, it was the first Catholic parish in the Township of East York. This church, built in 1948, is the second one on the site.
below: Bethany Baptist Church has been on the corner of Pape and Cosburn since 1920. Obviously this building is not that old! This is the addition, built in 1958, to the older church that you can just see on the right side of the picture.
below: A metal sculpture of a soldier mounted on the wall of The Royal Canadian Legion, hall #10, a memorial to the Soliders of Suicide – those soldiers who have taken their own lives, usually as the result of PTSD.
below: The southeast corner of Pape and O’Connor still sits empty. There used to be a gas station here and that probably meant contaminated soil that had to be dealt with. The development proposal sign dates from 2014 and was for a 2 storey commercial building. I am not sure why the delay or what the status of the proposal is.
below: Donlands Convenience with its rounded corner is similar to a few others in the city.
below: Do not block the entrance. …. or are the apples for the teachers?
below: A sample of some of the restaurants in the area. There are also quite a few Greek restaurants as the Danforth (and the original Greektown) is just to the south.
below: Golden Pizza Restaurant in an old brick building with a square facade at the roofline.
below: Another square roofline, Logan Convenience
Like most parts of the city, the houses are of various architectural styles.
Whether I am correct or not, I don’t know but I have always associated East York with small post-war bungalows.
A few are being “renovated”
below: What was surprising to me was how many multi-family buildings there are in the area – Both lowrise…
and apartment buildings
below: I am beginning to think that there should be at least one old car picture in every blog post! I certainly encounter enough of them! Today’s car – a yellow Oldsmobile (from the 1970’s?). Sounds like a challenge doesn’t it?!
Behind Dundas Street West near the Junction, there is alley with one old garage building that has been painted with street art.
At one end, there is a black and white drawing of a faceless person in a baseball cap holding a very large cassette tape. His/her shoe laces are undone.
This is a view of the whole west side of the building. All of the people are faceless.
At the very end, a colourful rendition of the skull and cross bones.
below: Think! or rather Stop and think. Above that, tbonez with The Forge Fury in another urban ninja squadron sticker.
below: There is a new public art installation nearing completion at the corner of Carlaw and Dundas. When the project is done, the obelisk shaped sculpture by Pierre Poussin will be in the middle of a small park. It is made of laser cut rusted metal and will feature internal LED lighting.
below: Shadows of the trees along a winding trail.
below: There really aren’t enough fairies in the world. The ones that are supposed to clean my home haven’t shown up yet either.
below: This looks like it was once an artwork pasted to a wall. An eagle’s head is still visible at the very top. Are those its feathers at the bottom by the shoes – one dark blue and one red stiletto.
below: The northwest corner of Pape and Dundas. The “This is Toronto” mural by J. Chiale is still there.
below: An old and worn sign
below: A not so old sign with three lovebot stickers on it.
below: Old cars seen in an alley. Any ideas on what model and year the brown car is?
below: Santa Claus hasn’t returned to the North Pole yet! This front yard looks quite barren
below: … compared to this one! I am happy to report that the “doll house” still exists. There is at least one Santa Claus in there!
below: Not quite every inch (centimeter!) is covered. Christopher Robin and Tigger, Ernie and a Picachu. Tweety bird in a blue jacket and a white horse, Dora the Explorer is eating an apple.
below: These stickers still exist! A Star Wars family with a dirty back window.
below: Usually if a couch is waiting for the garbage man it’s sitting closer to the edge of the street!
below: Symmetry at the back of Bruce Junior Public School built in 1923.
below: And then there is the asymmetry created when one side of a semi-divided house explodes upwards.
below: Leslieville has two murals. This one covers the side of the building plus the back in pink, red, and orange stripes. This Guidant Bikeshare mural was painted by Mediah, aka Evond Blake, in 2017.
below: Nearby at the intersection of Queen and Jones is this mural by Elicser Elliot (2016).
below: The Coca-Cola Coady Sweets ghost sign is still there but the convenience store under it has been replaced by a Spanish restaurant.
below: Queen Street East
below: This is on the wall beside a vacant lot on Queen Street East that has been empty for years.
below: Another vacant lot but more recently so.
below: An alley view, behind Queen Street East
below: Waiting for spring?
below: Dundas Street East
And how can we end without re-visiting the doll house?!
Until a few years ago this was part of Parkhurst Knitwear but today it sits empty. Today when I passed by the lighting was good for taking pictures of the south exterior wall. There is a fence between the street and the building but there is ample room for photography. I am now on many surveillance videos (if the warning signs were for real).
This building started its life as Radio Stores Building No. 16. It was constructed in 1942 and the chimney was added in 1946. Building No. 16 was part of a complex of buildings occupying 55 acres of land east of Laird Drive and south of Eglinton that was owned by Research Enterprises Ltd. (REL). During WW1 this land was an aerodrome.
In 1940 REL was incorporated in response to the outbreak of World War II; it was a Crown Corporation created through the Munitions and Supply Act of Parliament in September 1939.
REL’s mandate was the production of technology equipment such as optical instruments and radio and radar equipment to assist with pilots with night flight. During its 6 years of operation, REL employed 7,500 people.
After the war, this building was sold to Dorothea Knitting Mills (1947). Dorothea ultimately became part of Parkhurst Knitwear.
This building is part of a larger story – the slow disappearance of industries in Leaside as commercial and residential developments proliferate. Prior to 2010, the area was zoned industrial but developers fought for, and won, changes to the zoning in the area.
I can’t remember how long this building has been empty. If was still a functioning knitting mill in 2013. In 2019 the city of Toronto moved to have the building listed as a Heritage site. Last year there was a large sign on the building advertising the fact that it was soon to be a self-storage facility. Is that still its fate?
This is the 6th annual Winter Stations art installation event at Woodbine Beach. It was officially opened on Family Day, February17th.
below: Tying yellow ribbons on the yellow metal frame in “Mirage”, designed by Cristina Vega and Pablo Losa Fontangordo. The orange frame is parallel to the lake and the yellow sections are perpendicular. Depending on where you are standing, you see either a red transparent sun setting or a light and bright rising sun laying on the horizon.
below: The end product. There is now graffiti on the boxes
below: and cowbells hung from the underside of boxes in a couple of places.
below: When I returned to the beach a few days later, the installation was gone.
Information about the installations can be found at winterstations.com
This weekend saw the temperatures rise high enough draw people outside. A lot of the snow melted and there was hope in the air – hope that winter won’t last too much longer. This being Canada, winter can last as long as it wants!… And that’s often into April. In the meantime, it was great to enjoy the weekend.
below: A quiet sunny spot to sit
below: Taking selfies on the rocks at Edwards Gardens.
below: Watching the ducks on the partially frozen Wilket Creek.
The general idea yesterday afternoon was to walk Oakwood, southbound from St. Clair. What I didn’t expect when I left my cosy apartment was a strong cold wind, so part of the adventure was dictated by which direction the wind was blowing and how to avoid it (if possible!). If some of these photos look a little blurry, it’s because of the snow that was falling all afternoon.
below: Pizza Pizza on the northwest corner of St. Clair and Oakwood.
below: I hadn’t gone far when I found a lane so of course I had to follow it… Looking back towards Oakwood Collegiate.
below: Old black and white photo of St. Clair Ave from 1911 just after construction of Oakwood Collegiate was complete. Oakwood Avenue is now on the other side of the school in this photo. It is interesting to note that St. Clair had streetcar tracks back in 1911 but was still a dirt road. Apparently the city started building these tracks when the school was open – the St. Clair streetcar line was open in 1913. I found this photo in Living Toronto – follow the link if you want to read more about the history of this school.
below: And that is where I spotted this man with a little red heart…
below: … and across the alley from him was this woman, also with another little red heart. It’s Valentines Day today, how sweet and how appropriate.
below: The hearts just kept on coming. I’d only walked a few minutes and already I had enough for a Valentines Day post! 🙂
below: At the end of the lane I spotted this too…. can you see the LOVE? It looks like it’s written in the middle of the pink and blue graffiti but it’s actually on the metal vent.
below: So much for walking down Oakwood. I circled back to St. Clair West where I saw the Yummi Cafe & Laundromat with it’s hand written sign in the window. Support Our Teachers! These are trying days for education in Ontario as the teachers lock horns with Doug Ford and his Conservatives who speak first and think later.
below: This is middle section of the Royal Heights village mural painted by Murals by Marg in 2019. It is on the side of 1006 St. CLair West (at Appleton Ave).
below: To the right is a small butterfly, child height. Choose to be kind.
below: The left side has a larger butterfly as well as a bright yellow door with a blue umbrella. Let love rain down!
below: Right across the street (on the northeast corner of Appleton & St. Clair) is this mural. I haven’t been able to find out who the artist was.
below: Looking west on St. Clair as you approach Glenholme.

below: A coin laundry as well as Glenholme Variety on the southwest corner of St. Clair and Glenholme.
below: In front of 98 Glenholme is this little sculpture, an old fashioned sewing machine on a pole. It marks the home of Marcello Tarantino Sartoria (tailor).
below: Another alley – the wind back here is not so bad!
below: An old green Chevrolet delivery van with Imperial Upholstering Co written across the side and above the front window in faded letters. Also fading is the text: Manufacturers of Individual Style(?) Furniture
Mural by Ross Bonfanti and Sandra Tarantino with hearts, stars, a flying car and superhero kids.
The alley ended at Dufferin and that is where I headed south.
below: The southwest corner of Dufferin and Davenport
below: A black and white photo from 1912 of the construction of Dufferin Street at Davenport. This photo is originally from the City of Toronto archives but I found it online in an article on the history of Dufferin Street in blogTO.
below: Mary looks down upon us, from a niche in the wall of St. Mary of the Angels church.
below: Remnants of an art project left to weather on a fence around a schoolyard.
below: A smiling happy mural on the side of a dental office on Dufferin Street painted by spudbomb (2017)
below: Just north of Dupont Street, the CPR tracks cross Dufferin.
below: This strange pillar (artwork?) is on the southwest corner of Dufferin and Dupont. It used to be the marker/sign for the stores in the Galleria plaza on that corner. Everything there is under renovation at the moment so instead of tearing down the sign, it was converted into this. Hence, “Love me till I’m me again”.
below: From a different angle – the neighbourhood wins no beauty contest.
below: The architecture on Dufferin, both houses and stores, is a mishmash of styles (or non-styles!) that have evolved over the years. The next few photos try to give you an idea of the variety. First, at Dufferin & Rosemount
below: Dufferin & Hallam
below: Dufferin & Auburn
below: Standing alone at 1432
below: 1452A and its neighbours
below: An ominous sign – a boarded up house on Dufferin Street. Is change far behind? Just in case, I like to document what’s there because in this city, you turn around and everything’s different. And you think to yourself, “What used to be there?” But you can’t remember because that is how our memories work and isn’t that disconcerting?