Categories
- Best Sellers (7)
- Paintings (13)
- Anza-Borrego (4)
- Arizona (11)
- Alaska (3)
- Big Sur (7)
- Bishop (6)
- Bodie (19)
- Bruges, Belgium (7)
- Carlsbad (79)
- Coronado (9)
- Del Mar (22)
- Encinitas (64)
- Frames (1)
- Hawaii (17)
- Hermosa Beach (12)
- Huntington Beach (2)
- Imperial Beach (4)
- Industrial (2)
- Joshua Tree (7)
- La Jolla (41)
- Laguna Beach (7)
- Long Beach (6)
- Mammoth Lakes (9)
- Manhattan Beach (6)
- Morro Bay (5)
- Oceanside (10)
- Palm Springs (1)
- Paso Robles (6)
- Polyptychs (11)
- San Clemente (6)
- San Diego (35)
- San Francisco (22)
- San Marcos (1)
- Santa Monica (18)
- San Onofre (6)
- Solana Beach (15)
- The Netherlands (6)
- T-Shirts (4)
- Venice Beach (3)
Solana Beach Smiles
Availability: In Stock
Ex Tax: $0.00
A collage of nine Solana Beach photographs, in an open edition.
From top left to bottom right we have:
1) Tide Park, also known as “Tabletops”, because of the shallow reef off the coast here, is in the northern part of Solana Beach.
2) Del Mar Shores, also known as “Rock Pile”, is in the southern part of Solana Beach. Old concrete stairs leading to beach that were initially built in the 1970’s were replaced in 2014 and the lifeguard tower was added.
3) Fletcher Cove was created in the early 1920’s by one man hosing away tons of earth with water to provide easy access to the beach. It took about 3 months.
4) An aerial view of the northern part of Solana Beach, with Tide Park in the distance and Swami’s Point in Encinitas near the horizon on the left.
5) The Solana Beach welcome sign at the border with Cardiff-by-the-Sea on Highway 101.
6) An aerial view of Fletcher Cove, also known as Pillbox, named after World War II gunnery installations.
7) The Cedros Avenue Design District, with over 85 specialty shops, is the heart of Solana Beach.
8) The pedestrian bridge over the railroad tracks that connect Highway 101 with Cedros Avenue. To alleviate traffic in downtown Solana Beach, these tracks were lowered to their current location in the late 1990’s.
9) Going down the new concrete stairs at Del Mar Shores or Rock Pile.
The dividing lines are the railroad tracks.
When ordered framed, it will have default a barnwood frame. Please contact me through email or phone if you're interested in something different (different frame, type of paper, size, etc) than those listed here.
Write a review
Your Name:Your Review: Note: HTML is not translated!
Rating: Bad Good
Enter the code in the box below: