Vintage los angeles
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L.A. has undergone some major changes in just 60 years. RIP Every building in these photos.
michelle jimenez saved to History
Our illustrators have been super busy producing one-of-a-kind designs for a diverse roster of clients. Check out nine of the best!
Founded in 1781 and now one of the largest and most culturally diverse cities in the world, the beautiful Los Angeles, the City of Angels, is home to diversity, a prominent art presence, the fantastic film industry, a growing tech sector, incredible shopping, and outstanding museums. And yet for all its metropolitan and urban splendor, Los Angeles is traditionally still a beach and surf town, and those quaint, humble origins are depicted in this vintage design by Anderson Design Group's…

Anderson Design Group saved to Kenneth Crane
A 1950 traffic jam on Figueroa Street facing Sunset. (Bizarre Los Angeles)
Downtown L.A.'s Second and Third Street tunnels star in countless action movies and car commercials, but other tunnels--now lost to history--served as landmarks for decades.

Blass Hollingsworth saved to history
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A busy day in downtown Los Angeles circa 1940s. The Cutts Building (now the Great Western Building) is at 706 South Hill Street. (Bizarre Los Angeles)
August 1963, Hollywood Boulevard. On “The Walk of Fame."
I’m wondering if this woman waiting on the corner of Hollywood and Vine had just booked a ticket at the American Airlines office that opened in 1955. MGM’s “Something of Value" starring Rock Hudson and Sidney Poitier at the Pantages Theatre came out in June of 1957. The corner now has a different sign alerting passersby that they’re at Hollywood and Vine, and it’s nice but there’s something classy and timeless about that golden ribbon above the woman’s head that I wish was still there.
“Here the newly-built Los Angeles City Hall is buzzed by a Ford Tri-Motor airplane in 1928:”

Sally Jacob saved to California, oh California!