Apple's 'Creativity goes on' video shows perseverance of ingenuity in tough times

Got To Article
He shows how to use features of your home to create compelling architectural photography. Adrian from Apple Third Street Promenade in Santa Monica heads up the third class, "Shoot photos full of personality with iPhone." This class is focused on showing how you can up your portrait photography game through scene staging and utilizing the iPhone ...
0 comments

How to Keep Coronavirus From Bankrupting Your Business

Got To Article
Success could also depend on who the lender is, says financial planner Mitchell Kraus, cofounder of Santa Monica, California–based Capital Intelligence Associates. “With smaller banks, you have more flexibility in terms of negotiating because your loan is much more important to them than it would be to a large institution.” Though using ...
0 comments

Santa Monica Librarian Patty Wong Wins 2021-2022 ALA Presidency

Got To Article
The American Library Association announced this week that Patricia "Patty" M. Wong, city librarian at the Santa Monica Public Library in Santa Monica, Calif., has been elected ALA president for 2021-2022. Wong received 6,718 votes. Her opponent, Steven Yates, assistant director of the University of Alabama School of Library and Information ...
0 comments

Apple's 'Creativity goes on' shows perseverance of creativity in tough times

Got To Article
He shows how to use features of your home to create compelling architectural photography. Adrian from Apple Third Street Promenade in Santa Monica heads up the third class, "Shoot photos full of personality with iPhone." This class is focused on showing how you can up your portrait photography game through scene staging and utilizing the iPhone ...
0 comments

“It’s going to get worse”: Resi landlords take hit on April rental income

Got To Article
A more significant drop next month will have devastating effects, they added. Neil Shekhter, whose companies own 2,200 apartments in Santa Monica and Los Angeles, said about 85 percent of his tenants had paid their rent as of April 7. “When you lose 15 percent of your rental revenue,” he said, landlords begin to not have enough money to pay ...
0 comments