March/April 2026

Best Places to Live: Black Diamond

Best Places to Live: Black Diamond

Where to live if you want more space (and love the outdoors).

Black Diamond has always felt like a town apart—not just in distance from Seattle (39 miles), Renton (18 miles), and Bellevue (28 miles), but in pace and personality. Located in southeastern King County, the former coal mining hotspot dates back to the late 19th century, taking its name from the Black Diamond Coal Mining Company….

Best Places to Live: Woodinville

Best Places to Live: Woodinville

A close-knit, family-friendly community.

Say Woodinville, and the first thing most people think of is wine, but with a growing arts scene, independent agricultural ventures, and top-notch hospitality holdings, this formerly sleepy suburb is stepping up to become a coveted destination for buying a home. “It still feels like a true community, where people know each other and local…

Best Places to Live: Everett

Best Places to Live: Everett

For those looking to get in on the ground level.

Less  than 30 miles north of Seattle, Everett was built from working-class roots, with industries such as logging, lumber, and aerospace manufacturing at its core. In recent years, the city has enticed an increasingly younger crowd attracted by housing affordability and job opportunities. “We’re seeing mostly working-age talent in their late 20s to early 40s…

Spring Arts Preview: Film

Spring Arts Preview: Film

Festivals keep the region’s movie scene busy this season.

Spring is festival season for Seattle movie lovers. For a few weeks each year, film festivals take over the city’s theaters, turning them into gathering spots for audiences eager to see what’s new on screen. Here are some worth catching. Seattle Jewish Film Festival The 31st annual Seattle Jewish Film Festival is a celebration of…

Spring Arts Preview: Visual Art

Spring Arts Preview: Visual Art

New exhibitions across Seattle offer plenty of reasons to spend an afternoon gallery hopping.

Pioneer Square’s First Thursday crowds may be getting the headlines, but the city’s visual arts scene stretches far beyond one neighborhood. From Belltown to Ballard to Capitol Hill—and even down to Tacoma—galleries and museums are presenting new exhibitions that reward a slow look. Here are the shows we recommend seeing this spring. Indira Allegra: The…

Spring Arts Preview: Theater

Spring Arts Preview: Theater

Stages across the region are hosting everything from intimate productions to beloved Broadway favorites.

This spring’s theater lineup runs the gamut—from a Tony-winning drama at Seattle Rep to a velvet-roped cabaret in Capitol Hill and the return of one of Broadway’s biggest musicals. These productions offer a look at the range of work happening on local stages right now. Hurricane Diane Written by Pulitzer Prize finalist Madeleine George, Hurricane…

Spring Arts Preview: Dance

Spring Arts Preview: Dance

This season’s dance offerings put storytelling at their forefronts.

With all the recent buzz around Pioneer Square’s post-pandemic awakening, a lot of people are claiming that the arts are back. In our opinion, they never went away. Seattle’s dance community has continued building new work, from longtime local creators to internationally known choreographers. This spring brings returning classics, world premieres, and festivals highlighting artists…