Beards and Beatniks: Eric D. Lough on Why Beards Are Here to Stay

Which way does your beard point tonight?  In 1956 Alan Ginsberg made reference to Walt Whitman’s beard in “A Supermarket in California.” Now, almost sixty years later, beards are still a part of popular culture and the Beat Generation is being revived through Famous Beard Oil Company, founded by Eric D…

Five More Fashion Events in Denver in April

Spring fashion events keep popping up, everything from fashion shows to flea markets. Here are five more events to put on your calendar for the end of April.    5. Wine Wednesday at Whorl Shop  5 to 7 p.m. Wednesday, April 22 Whorl Shop  3326 Tejon Street Wine Wednesday at…

Growing Gardens After-School Clubs Gears Up for Spring

Growing Gardens has been managing eleven acres of land in north Boulder since 1998, and the organization offers a variety of gardening programs for all ages — all designed to enrich the lives of community members through sustainable urban agriculture. The organization’s Children’s Peace Garden, located on the Growing Gardens…

Five Best Movie Theaters for Food and Drink in Denver

Dinner and a movie? Why not make your next night out dinner at a movie! Not only does metro Denver have a wide array of movie theaters offering everything from French films to the latest blockbuster, those theaters have increasingly interesting gastro delights to supplement your cinematic sampling. You can…

Street Style: Bohemian Chic Is on Trend at The Ting Tings Concert

We spotted plenty of bohemian-chic fashions outside the Ting Tings concert at the Gothic Theater on April 1, and chatted with four ladies who were looking fly as the British pop-punk duo finished its set. Keep reading to learn their style inspirations and how they selected outfits for their night…

The Five Best Flea Markets in Metro Denver

It was back in 1998 that Denver’s flea-market renaissance began with the Ballpark Market, which brought its European-style ambience to Larimer Street near Coors Field. Since then, we’ve had markets hawking antiques and geegaws under viaducts and car-boot sales in parking lots and, eventually, a new, tenacious brand of flea…

Photos: Paper Gowns Make the Cut at the 2015 Paper Fashion Show

The Art Directors’ Club of Denver threw its eleventh annual Paper Fashion Show Friday night at the Bindery on Blake, on a runway crowded with the ingenious and sassy cut-and-paste concoctions of fifty local design teams. There were no guidelines, other than a requirement that each outfit should be 90…

Ten Reasons the Mercury Cafe Should Stay Open Another Forty Years

On the Ides of March forty years ago, Marilyn Megenity opened the forerunner to the Mercury Cafe in Indian Hills. In the fifteen years after that, her cafe/cultural gathering place changed names a couple of times and addresses many more. Since 1990, it’s been at home at 2199 California Street, where Megenity…

The Five Best Sites for Looking at Denver’s Past

Denver’s cityscape is always changing, but lately this boomtown has been exploding. Fortunately, this city is home to many devoted souls working to preserve images of what the Mile High City — and other places around the state — once looked like. While The Denver Eye took the prize as…

Six Best Spanish-Language Karaoke Bars in Denver

Denver caters to karaoke aficionados, with evenings that offer everything from punk-rock backup bands to songbooks filled with Selena songs. We crowned 100% de Agave as the Best Spanish-Language Karaoke in our Best of Denver 2015, but it’s not the only place where you can throw back a tequila shot and belt…

Another 100 Colorado Creatives: Daisy McConnell

#28: Daisy McConnell Curator, administrator and artist Daisy McConnell helps to keep Colorado Springs up-to-date — and sometimes even ahead of the pack — on the arts front, as director of the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs Galleries of Contemporary Art, otherwise known as GOCA 1421, the campus gallery,…

Whittier Alley Loop Will Tie One of Denver’s Oldest Neighborhoods Together

Around this time last year, some residents of the Whittier neighborhood started receiving copies of an anonymous racist letter. Though it contained only two simple lines, expressing who wasn’t “welcome” in one of Denver’s oldest ’hoods, the community united to fight back against the hateful message. This determination — along…

Another 100 Colorado Creatives: Phil Solomon

#29: Phil Solomon In the realm of experimental film, Phil Solomon is a name to remember: His work has been oft-awarded, screened internationally and exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art and the Whitney Biennial in New York. For nearly 25 years, he’s been sharing his pioneering techniques and inspiring…

Missing the Mystery of Late-Night Random Acts of Nerdery

Some movies leave an indelible impression the very first time you see them. For me, one of those movies is Highlander (showing tonight as the debut offering from Fantastique, a new fantasy film series at Alamo Drafthouse). Something — hell, everything — about this eon-spanning, sword-fighting tale of immortals captured…