May/June 2026
Seattle Founders Rethink the Weighted Vest
After getting into rucking, two business-minded friends grew frustrated by gear that seemed to cater to men. So they decided to create their own.
Esther Sedgwick and Courtney Bigelow’s idea for their Seattle-based fitness equipment brand, The Carry, came from a simple frustration: they couldn’t find a weighted vest that worked for them. “We fell in love with the workout,” Sedgwick explains of the duo’s experience with rucking, which is, in its simplest terms, putting some weight on your…
Seattle Pride Meets the World Cup
A star-studded video campaign celebrates the LGBTQ+ community ahead of the June 26 match at Lumen Field.
Last year, when Michi Suzuki was contacted about getting involved with Seattle’s FIFA World Cup 26 Local Organizing Committee—and specifically, the Pride+ Match Impact Council—she didn’t even have to think twice before saying yes. As a local PR firm owner, longtime soccer player, and member of the LGBTQ+ community, Suzuki saw the opportunity as a…
World Cup: Get Set in Pioneer Square
This summer, Seattle’s oldest neighborhood becomes the center of the city’s soccer action.
Pioneer Square is the Seattle neighborhood closest to the stadium where Seattle’s six World Cup matches will occur. The area’s constant reinvention makes it one of the most exciting places to hang out, soccer events or not. Whether you’re planning to attend a match or just want to be where the action is, it’s always…
Madrona Gets a New Gallery
Interior designer Michelle Dirkse and artist Jeremy Prim bring a new art-centered space to the neighborhood.
Interior designer Michelle Dirkse has centered art in her work for more than a decade. Since launching her firm in 2013, Dirkse has earned a reputation for building projects around unique, cheeky, and ultimately striking pieces. Even as a new designer, she supported local artists, often handing over the keys to her studio. “When I…
Seattle Gets Ready for the World Cup
As one of 16 metropolises chosen to host soccer’s biggest event, the city is preparing for its moment on the global stage.
The FIFA World Cup 2026 is more than just a soccer tournament—it’s a global celebration. With more than 3.5 billion fans, the sport is by far the most popular in the world, and the World Cup is the largest global sporting event on the planet. Seattle was chosen as one of the host cities in…
Straight to the Point: Seattle’s Newest Darts Bar Gives the Post-Work Drink a Sharper Edge
Flight Club, South Lake Union’s recently opened darts bar, hits the mark as Seattle’s newest social hub. The brand’s first West Coast location updates the classic British game of darts, using proprietary tracking software for automatic scoring across seven multiplayer games. With Victorian-fairground-inspired décor, craft cocktails, and a menu full of easily shareable food options,…
Five Ways to Make the Most of a Seattle Summer
Rooftop cocktails, rose gardens, waterfront walks, farmers markets, and one very big Seattle Center party.
I have lived in the Pacific Northwest long enough to expect it, and still, late spring catches me by surprise. The mountain returns for the season, suddenly part of the almost-daily view again. The grass isn’t (so) soggy anymore. Dinner can happen outside, and the city gets a little easier to love. Here are five…
Creation in the Balance
Artist Gabriel-Bello Díaz utilizes classic materials and tech-forward methods to produce pieces that straddle the line between past and present—and feel wholly of the moment.
Discover how Seattle artist Gabriel-Bello Díaz blends 3D printing, robotics, and Taino mythology in his "Ancestral Future" show at King Street Station.
After Ballet, Lucien Postlewaite’s Next Act
After nearly two decades at Pacific Northwest Ballet, principal dancer Lucien Postlewaite is retiring from the company and stepping into a new, offstage career.
In ballet, extension is everything. The ability to lift and hold the limbs in the air is the basis for much of a dancer’s movement and artistic expression. No one knows this as well as Lucien Postlewaite, who, at 42, has been dancing for almost his entire life. A principal at Pacific Northwest Ballet—and the…
Cities Only Work if We Show Up
The case for small business, creative density, and why culture is a team effort.
I have always been in love with cities. I joke with friends that I have crushes on cities the way they have crushes on good-looking strangers. Sometimes—as with Paris and London—my unrequited crush meant finding an excuse to move there. With Seattle, however, that initial attraction grew into a long-term relationship. I arrived here as…