The Mission: Putting the temporary in contemporary

From 1954 to 1974 Lakeside Liquors was a little mom and pop shop at 2188 Mission Street. Local photographer Dave Glass/Dizzy Atmosphere grew up with the store as his actual mom and pop’s shop. He recently shared a shot of the exterior and surrounding Mission Street apparently taken in 1984.

Mission district, San Francisco
[photo by Dave Glass]


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As the street generally looks nowadays. [Google Maps]

Dave’s got a ton of other great Mission photos on his Flickr page.

Check out this Mission shopping extravaganza from 1954

Found under Fred Sharples’ floorboards.

[via Brock]

UPDATE: Detailed 1954 vs 2012 comparison over at Burrito Justice.

Hot new look for summer: Frothy, fruity brunch drinks that perfectly match your tanktop

Zoltar machine debuts at Alley Cat Books on 24th Street

Alley Cat’s Dan Weiss hips us to the news (via an email titled “I wish I was big”):

Here he is, ZOLTAR in his new home in the gallery at alley cat books on 24th @treat. We have big plans for him that may or may not involve giving book recommendations, for now though he’s in basic fortune-telling mode. Incidentally we are also looking for suggestions for a name for our gallery and offering 50 dollar gift certificates to the best three ideas (Alleycatbookssf@gmail.com)

Thanks, Dan!

Look at this insane-looking dog I saw in a bar the other day

Taco time

Smithsonian just published an interview with taco expert Jeffrey Pilcher, in which we learn all about the history of the taco, from its origins in Mexico to its immigration to the USA:

What role did the taquería play in Mexican history? Who ate there?

For a long time taquerías were in the working-class neighborhoods. Industrialization brought migrants from all over the country, and particularly women, to Mexico City because of light industry. Women brought with them their regional cooking skills. Every state, every region, every town has slightly different foods, so Mexico City was a bubbling stew where all these foods were available. People were able to sample a cosmopolitan world of dining that was not for the rich. This Mexican popular cuisine was the origin of what we think about as Mexican food.

Read on.

[via kottke.org] [Instagram by Lindsey]

New BART seats actually look pretty vintage

Definitely an improvement though.

[via Vic]

In case you missed it, here’s how the solar eclipse went

You had to get creative if you wanted to observe it.

[via Scott McDowell]

Hot new look for summer: Day-glo matchy matchy

These two people didn’t know each other, and didn’t plan their matching outfits, but they sure look great together. (AND it wasn’t even B2B day.)

Graffiti plea

Seems to be working!