Instead of pictures of this year’s Pride Parade, I am posting some photos from previous Pride weekends from my archives. I have tried to use pictures that weren’t chosen for prior blog posts. As you know, the fall out from Covid-19 includes cancellation of parades in Toronto this summer. There was a virtual Pride parade online this year (so I hear) but that doesn’t lend itself to photography. We miss the social interactions that normally occur. We miss the atmosphere and the fun. This collection is a poor substitute for the real thing but maybe it will bring back a few memories….. See you in 2021!
Posts Tagged ‘flowers’
Pride, no parade 2020
Posted: June 28, 2020 in events, peopleTags: crowd, dancing, flags, float, flowers, fun, laugh, LGBQT, naked, nude, parade, people super soaker, rainbow, spectators
Mt Pleasant florals
Posted: December 2, 2019 in graffiti and street artTags: Alexander Bacon, bacon, chicory, floral, flowers, Manor Rd, mt pleasant, murals, paino piano, peony, pink, rose
There are two new colourful murals on Mt Pleasant. The first, all pretty in pink, is on the northeast corner of Mt Pleasant and Manor Rd. It happens to be the location of a new Piano Piano restaurant that hasn’t opened yet. This is the second Piano Piano location and the first, on Harbord St., is also painted pink with large flowers (sorry but I don’t have a picture of it).
These flowers were painted by street artist Bacon aka Alexander Bacon.
Just down the street there is another flower mural. This time its blue flowers, chicory, and it too was painted by Bacon.
walking north on Croft Street
Posted: September 16, 2019 in alleys, doors, graffiti and street art, locationsTags: alley, Andrea Manica, bird, Bruno Smoley, car, construction, Croft Street, doors, dudeman, flowers, garage doors, garages, grominator, houses, lane, morning glory, mural, red roses, street sign, windows
This is another blog post about Croft Street, a short street that runs between College and Harbord streets just east of Bathurst. It has changed a lot since I first wrote about it in 2013. The corner of Croft and College Streets was home to the mural commemorating the fire of 1904 – it is long gone. In between then and now, the south end of Croft was spruced up with colourful murals and planters in 2016. These are a few pictures that I took as I walked up Croft yesterday (after dodging construction stuff and workmen at College).
below: A mural by Elicser is at the northeast corner of College and Croft.
below: Praying mantis mural
below: Croft is not immune to the construction/renovation craze that we’re in the midst of.
below: The fire station tower at College and Bellevue is now visible from Croft street.
below: Looking up Croft Street. One of the garages now has a Raptors logo and the one next to it is being renovated.
below: Some of the 2016 murals and planters are still in place.
below: Looking north across Vankoughnet Street
below: A door to nowhere
below: We are the future and we don’t want any junk mail
below: The door with the metal strapping is still there.
below: A large grominator on a brick wall
below: Morning glory flowers and vine growing up a street sign pole.
below: More flowers, red rose stenciled onto a garage door
below: Garage doors painted by Bruno Smokey and Andrea Manica
below: A fun ride in vibrant colours by dudeman
beach morning
Posted: August 23, 2019 in nature, waterfrontTags: beach, black eye susans, boats, clouds, daisies, dog, flowers, Kew Beach, Kew Gardens, Kew Williams, Lake Ontario, life guard, lobelia cardinalis, monarch butterfly, muskoka chairs, paddle boards, people, rocks, sane, sky, walking, water, zinnia
As August marches relentlessly along the daylight hours shrink. One advantage of the shorter days is that sunrise isn’t at a time that starts with the number 5. I’m not a morning person but I like to take morning pictures.
below: Pinkish sky as the sun rises.
below: There was an enormous flock of birds flying low over the water together. Can you see the swimmer?
below: Ready for the day
below: Reading on the beach… just after 7 a.m.
below: A group of women on their paddle boards (not quite so early. I had breakfast part way through my walk that morning).
below: Mother and son.
below: At 11:15 the life guards row to their stations.
below: Kew Williams house, now on the grounds of Kew Gardens. Kew Williams (1873-1956 ) built the house in 1902 on the grounds of what was then The Canadian Kew Gardens, a campground resort opened in 1879 by his parents, Joseph & Jane (nee Henry) Williams. Joseph Williams sold the house and 20 acre property to the City of Toronto in 1907. A year later the property became Kew Gardens.
The gardens are very well maintained. They are in full bloom at the moment and looking gorgeous. I will leave you with a few pictures of flowers, colourful ones to brighten your day.
below: A stalk of lobelia cardinalis grows among the black eyed susans.
below: A monarch butterfly finds a bright red flower.
below: A pink zinnia
below: Gaillardia pulchella, also known as firewheel or Indian blanket
below: Three white daisies growing with smaller orange flowers
east on the 506
Posted: August 6, 2019 in graffiti and street art, locations, old buildings, peopleTags: 506, Blue Fire, Broadview, Carlaw underpass, cars, convenience store, flowers, food mart, Gerrard St., hello kirsten, Jenny's, Julian Palma, Kirsten McCrea, painting, people, street art, street scenes, streets, TTC, variety store, Victoria Day
506 is the number of the Carlton streetcar which runs from High Park in the west to Main Street subway station in the east. The older cars still run on this route and one advantage of these older streetcars is that they have windows that open. This makes it easy to take pictures while travelling; yesterday I went eastward from Yonge as far as Coxwell, sometimes on the streetcar and sometimes on foot.
below: Pointing the camera out the window, D & J Mart Convenience store at the corner of Gerrard & Sackville.
below: A new curvy building rises up on the corner of Carlton and Church. The older building on the left with the R U on the top is the old Maple Leaf Gardens, now part of Ryerson University as well as a large Loblaws.
below: People, striped hoardings, and closed sidewalks.
below: Waiting outside Jenny’s at the corner of Parliament and Gerrard where the streetcar makes another turn.
below: Another convenience store on a corner on Gerrard. This time there is also a construction site in the picture! Are there more construction sites than variety stores or vice versa in this city?
below: Looking south on Broadview at Gerrard.
below: The 506 streetcar passes through Chinatown East (the area around Broadview & Gerrard) where many of the old houses are also businesses.
below: The southeast corner of Broadview and Gerrard now has an A & W restaurant which seems like an intruder in an otherwise Chinese/Asian section of town.
below: At the intersection of Gerrard and Carlaw, where the railway passes over the roads, the walls have been freshly painted. The north wall is a series of abstract shapes and colours like this.
below: The new painting incorporates the older art that was there. In the center of the newly painted rectangles are two grey shapes, these are originals. They are part of a 1996 installation by Dereck Revington called ‘Blue Fire’. There is still a plaque that describes these aluminum pieces as “a constellation of five paired aluminum fragments etched with traces of a poem by Robin Blaser and suspended from the entrances to the underpass”. Strange grey shapes (flames?) on dirty white concrete. Regardless of what you think of the concept, the reality is that it was drab.
below: Lead artist Kirsten McCrea (also known as Hello Kirsten) and her assistants, Victoria Day & Julian Palma, have certainly brightened up the space! The south wall is a series of frames pictures of hands holding flowers. As seen from across the street ….
below: … and from close up
below: And lastly, the end support wall of the overpass where the flowers and the stylized shapes come together.
below: Store signs near Pape including the bilingual Italy Hair Design – but not in Italian!
below: With remnants of the past such as string of pennants faded to grey….
below: … or an old street sign still attached to the building.
below: After Greenwood, the 506 streetcar passes through Little India before it turns north on Coxwell.
below: In the late afternoon and evening, Little India is much more lively. Many shops sell food on the street – roasted corn on the cob (a pile is ready to cook on the green table here) as well as south Asian foods. To the right of the corn is a bundle of sugar cane.
These few kilometres on a streetcar route have opened a small but fairly typical cross section of the city starting with the newer, taller, shinier center. There’s quite a bit of multiculturalism, some history, and some colourful new art. It’s a story that plays out all over the city in many similar yet different forms. Familiar but unique.
below: Searching for a story? 😇
love, peace, and creativity
Posted: July 11, 2019 in landmarks, locationsTags: aliens, colours, Distillery District, doors, flowers, inflatables, paint, Parer Studio, people, piano, pictures, pride, public art, rainbow, sunflowers, Thursday doors, windows
…along with coloured doors, very big aliens, and a photography exhibit, all outside at the Distillery District.
below: “What’s That?” by Parer Studios. One of three ginormous inflatable aliens that have taken over the Distillery District but apparently they come with messages of peace, love, and creativity. Together they form the “fantastic Planet” series.
below: “Over”. At night they are illuminated from within.
In the recent past, all of the doors in the Distillery were dark green (like most of the door and window frames still are). A while ago, they were transformed with colour. Many different colours in fact, and perhaps you could say a rainbow of doors.
below: One of many photographs that adorn the brick walls of the Distillery District that showcase the works of photographers from around the world. Collectively they are, “Pride at the Distillery, More than Just Rainbows”.
below: I am not sure of the title of this one. What I do know is that the alien’s hand is the perfect height to pat people on the head as they take selfies. Check instagram for examples? I noticed on instagram that there were photos of the aliens without the barricades. My timing was wrong?
below: Yellow doors (at least on the outside)
below: “Gay Pride Parade Participant in Costume, 1983”, New York City. Available on Getty Images, where the large resolution image will set you back $575 (at least it’s in Canadian dollars). All the Pride theme photos on display at the Distillery were purchased through Getty Images.
I will fudge it a bit and claim that this is a “Thursday Door” blog post. It’s Thursday and there are a few doors included, right? If you’ve been following this blog, you might know that I am but one of many bloggers who share door photos and stories. For more door posts, see Norm 2.0’s Thursday Doors (with more door posts linked in his comments section).
Three Sisters, Tikay and Aner
Posted: June 19, 2019 in graffiti and street artTags: agricultural, agriculture, aner, Aner Urra, bean, colours, corn, Dundas West, First Nations, flowers, indigenous, leaves, mural, paint, Paula Tikay, Rodrigo Ardiles, squash, symbols, three sisters, tikay, tikay & aner, vegetables, vine, women
Three Sisters – both literal and allegorical. Three women, each with a vegetable, and these three vegetables, corn, squash, and beans, are the three sisters of indigenous agriculture. These were the main crops of most North American native groups and they were usually planted together; together they thrived for thousands of years.
This is one of two murals by Paula Tikay and Aner Urra (aka tikay & aner) in the Dundas West area. They are two indigenous Mapuche artists from Chile who were invited to come to Toronto to paint the murals.
The project was organized by Rodrigo Ardiles (of the Dundas West Museum). This neighbourhood was chosen because of its ties to the many immigrants from Chile who have found a home here as early as the 1970s. Children from the nearby Alexander Muir / Gladstone Avenue Junior and Senior Public School and The Grove Community School had some input on the mural. Also involved was StartARToronto.
Glass flowers
Posted: May 12, 2019 in galleriesTags: 3d printing, CONTACT, Contact photography festival, digital painting, flowers, gallery, OCADU, onsite gallery, photography, Richmond St., sculpture, T.M. Glass, vase
Now showing at the Onsite Gallery, is an exhibit of photography by T.M. Glass called “The Audible Language of Flowers”. Glass’s work is inspired by 17th and 18th century northern European still life flower paintings.
below: On the back wall is “Clematis in a Chinese Teapot”, 2017 (The teapot is from the Gardiner Museum). The photograph on the right (with the red flowers) uses a vase from the Royal Ontario Museum, “Tulips in a Persian Vessel”, 2017.
But they are not just large photographs. They have been enhanced in a process that has become known as digital painting. This technique involves enlarging the image to the pixel level. Attributes such as sharpness, colour and vibrance are then manipulated giving the finished image more of a painted look.
below: Part of “Anemone Canadensis in an Italian Pharmaceutical Vessel”, 2017 (The ‘vase’ is from the Royal Ontario Museum).
below: Close up of some of the flowers in one of the photographs where you can see the “brush strokes”.
below: Glass has also been experimenting with 3D printing. On display are some sandstone and resin sculptures that were created from digital files, including these two.
The exhibit continues until August 18th.
Onsite Gallery is part of OCADU and is at 199 Richmond St. West.
This exhibit is part of the CONTACT Photography Festival.
waiting on the cherry blossoms….
Posted: May 9, 2019 in locations, natureTags: blossoms, cherry, flowers, High Park, outdoors, park, people, sakura, spring, trees
I’m not sure what the allure of the cherry (aka sakura) blossoms is. Has it become a symbol of spring and who doesn’t like the long awaited end of winter? Is there something special about the cherry flower? Or is it more ‘exotic’ than the magnolia that flowers about the same time, or a bit earlier? Why not celebrate the lilac trees? Or other trees that blossom in the spring?
below: A couple of cherry blossoms along with some buds and partially opened flowers.
Although there are a number of places around the city to see sakura trees (14 I think), High Park seems to be the most popular place. True, they have the oldest trees and the most trees planted in one area. It has become the site of an annual pilgrimage by thousands of people to see the blossoms. Even though the ‘sakura watch’ website said that ‘peak’ blossom hadn’t yet arrived, I decided to check out High Park yesterday.
below: Lots of signs to direct pedestrian traffic to the cherry trees. The roads were closed to most cars.
below: There were a couple of school groups there for the morning. Although there weren’t too many blossoms to see, it was a beautiful spring morning and many of the kids were making the most of it.
below: An Instagram moment I suspect.
below: An engagement photo shoot
Yesterday there were many more buds and partially opened flowers than there were blossoms. By the weekend, there will probably be a profusion of white petals… as well as a swarming of people. I had to search for flowers to take pictures of but at least it was a relatively quiet and peaceful morning.









































































































































































