For artists like Carole King, it was "hippie heaven."
The singer wrote her hit ‘Carey’ while camping out in a seaside cave on Crete in early 1970
Original paintings by contemporary artist Emily Keating Snyder, Pair 15 x 20 each - on Unstretched canvas Please note, these are loose canvas paintings which may be tacked to the wall as small tapestries or framed by your local framer in a shadowbox style frame. Framing is not included. These pieces are from Emily's "Ladies of the Canyon" series inspired by the folk music of Laurel Canyon in its heyday. About the artist: Emily Keating Snyder is an LA-based artist currently working in abstract painting and embroidery. She graduated from NYU in 2009. Emily's work brings craft into the context of fine art by literally stitching thread into artist’s canvas, also bringing what is traditionally a women’s craft into the context of historically masculine fine art painting. Her pieces balance rigidity and looseness with spontaneous brushstrokes and raw canvas interacting with intentional embroidered lines. Emily’s work has been featured by Emily Henderson, Real Simple, Clever, SF Girl By Bay, designlovefest and Parachute Home. less
For artists like Carole King, it was "hippie heaven."
For artists like Carole King, it was "hippie heaven."
For artists like Carole King, it was "hippie heaven."
From its glitzy beginnings to its hair metal heyday, we’re tracing the history of the Whisky a Go Go, one of the most storied clubs in America.
March 25, 2015 by Jon Patrick Laurel Canyon Daze The epic tales of Laurel Canyon’s heyday continues to linger like the warm smell of colitas rising up through the air… It’s here that the SoCal sound was born out of an era of relaxed morals, folks expanding their mental horizons (drugs), and a wave of eclectic misfits coming from all [...]
Singer, guitarist and founder member of the Eagles who co-wrote many of their easy-on-the-ear hits
This camping relic went from boring to fab thanks to DIY elbow grease and a bit of design savvy.