A Quickie!

Nicole Popovich Can you guess, from the profiles, who made this dress? For a full slideshow of the activity on Wednesday, March 28, click here. Five minutes, a dress form, a swath of fabric, some pins and a belt. What could you make out of that? Cat’s guessing she could…

Contestant #10: Crystal Sharp

Many of you met Crystal Sharp on March 28 during the kick-off of the Tamarac Square Fashion Project, but do you know if she prefers Tim or Heidi, polkadots or camo? Keep reading to find out! Name: Crystal Sharp Company name: She She Boutique Years designing: 10+ Bio: Tucked away…

Flip Your Lid

Drink specials were pretty much the best thing about college. Flip cup was a close second. Also known as “flippy cup,” “tippy cup” and “boat races,” this tabletop game of speed and agility pits two teams of up to five players against each other in what is essentially a relay…

Roots Crop

It’ll be wall-to-wall folk in more ways than one when the Swallow Hill Music Association’s signature fundraiser, the Denver Folk & Roots Music Festival, rolls into the elegant and acoustically fine Ellie Caulkins Opera House for a night of first-class musicianship. National recording artists Bruce Cockburn and Nanci Griffith headline…

Short and Sweet

“There are only one or two people in North America who have seen more short films than I have,” says George Eldred, program director of the Aspen Shortsfest. But, he adds, his is a dubious achievement: “Some of those, nobody but the filmmakers and their mothers need to see.” Rest…

Crash Test Dummies

Winter Park wanted to do something a little different during Spring Blast, its annual end-of-the-season farewell to snow, skiers and riders. And the Dummy Downhill Race certainly qualifies as, um, different. Here’s how it works: Twenty teams — with a maximum of four people per team — mount a dummy…

Rock On!

When San Diego Padres reliever Doug Brocail plunked highly touted up-and-coming Rockies shortstop Troy Tulowitzki on the wrist during spring training, the hearts of Colorado Rockies fans across the state collectively rose to our throats. Our boy! Our supposed phenom! Once it was revealed that Tulowitzki’s wrist wasn’t broken, though,…

Copper Wired

The old adage is, “March comes in like a lion and goes out like a lamb,” but there’s nothing docile or doe-eyed about Copper Sunsation, Copper Mountain’s three-weekend-long end-of-season bash. And how does one say farewell, Copper style? With Colorado’s Largest Easter Egg Hunt, the Peanut Butter & Rail Jam,…

Hey, Big Spenders

Vegas just isn’t the same these days. Take the Stardust Resort & Casino — which opened in 1958, was destroyed in Mars Attacks and had its days of Mafia rule chronicled in the film Casino. That Vegas icon imploded in a barrage of fireworks and ash on March 13, disappearing…

Success Story

The local branch of Dress for Success — a national nonprofit that provides appropriate business attire for low-income women with job interviews — is celebrating its tenth anniversary of do-gooding in Denver, and its staff will be tooting the organization’s horn at an appropriate place: Soulrise Gallery, a woman-centric spot…

Front and Center

“Sexual orientation and gender identity are core identity issues,” says Emily Fischer, a social-work intern at the Denver Veterans Affairs hospital. “It doesn’t make sense to get medical and mental-health treatment without talking about the ways sexuality and your sense of your own gender identity impact your life — whether…

High-Flying

Barry Ross has been illustrating other people’s experiences for 25 years; a regular column in Flying Magazine, “I Learned About Flying From That,” includes Ross’s pen, ink, watercolor and acrylic art. The stories are sometimes frightening and sometimes comical, but each one contains a lesson learned. Not everyone is familiar…

E.C. Come, E.C. Go

It’s just a theory, but it’s quite possible that the social upheaval among youth in the swingin’ ’60s can be directly traced to one source: MAD magazine, that slick devil’s advocate of comic books, which fed a whole generation of Cold War kids a constant diet of satire delivered on…

Evil Under the Sun

T. C. Boyle grew up in Peekskill, New York, didn’t go past the Hudson River until he was 21, and made his first trip “out West” — to Buffalo — to meet his future in-laws. But Boyle quickly made up for lost time; he published his first novel, Water Music,…

Behind the Mask

Hard-core phantasie geeks will relish role-playing every enemy of The Last Mimzy, a family-style sci-fi adventure whose director, Bob Shaye, is better known to them as the evil wizard — the alien executive who peed all over the Fellowship. Shaye, in his other job as New Line Cinema topper, has…

The Lookout

At various times over the last decade, David Fincher, Sam Mendes and Michael Mann were attached to direct Scott Frank’s screenplay for The Lookout, about a brain-damaged high-school hockey stud who’s smooth-talked by distant acquaintances into robbing a small-town bank. That Frank — best known for straightening and sharpening the…

Our top DVD picks for the week of March 27

Bow (Tartan) Comeback Season (First Look) Curse of the Golden Flower (Sony) The Eden Formula (Westlake) The Addams Family: Volume 2 (MGM) Errol Flynn: The Signature Collection, Volume 2 (Warner Bros.) Fantastic Four: World’s Greatest Heroes, Volume 1 (Fox) Following Sean (New Video Group) Hacking Democracy (Docurama) Happy Feet (Warner…

My Name Is Mud

In the poem “In Just-,” e.e. cummings described the world as “mud-luscious” and “puddle-wonderful” — words so perfectly befitting MotorStorm’s gorgeously sloppy off-road hijinks, the game’s designers probably had them tacked up on a wall somewhere. And had Cummings paid $60 for MotorStorm, the verbally inventive (and upper-case averse) poet…

Tomorrow’s Misery Today

Children of Men (Universal) Set in a tomorrow that looks like yesterday, Alfonso Cuarón’s wrenching adaptation of P.D. James’ novel feels more like documentary than fiction. In the movie’s world, women have gone barren, and immigrants are tossed into prison camps; it’s the proverbial nightmare to which we might actually…

Cat’s Turn!

An Anthroplogie dress Cat would like for spring. The Tamarac Square Fashion Project debuts this evening, March 28, so in honor of that, Cat took a little dose of her own questionnaire. If you wanted to know, Cat has answered… See you on the runway at 7 p.m. , 7777…

Contestant #9: Tricia Hoke

Infernalfruit.com Meet Tricia. She likes big Rottie dogs, polkadots and Dr. Suess. What will she send down the runway during the Tamarac Square Fashion Project? Come find out at the kick-off on Wednesday, March 28, at 7 p.m. Name: Tricia Hoke Company name: Potential Fashions Years designing: 7, but I’ve…

Contestant #8: Mona Lucero

Name: Mona Lucero Company name: Mona Lucero Design Boutique Years designing: 24 Bio: Mona Lucero was born in San Francisco but raised in Grand Junction. At the age of four she decided she wanted to be an artist, and in 1983 she received her B.F.A. from the University of Colorado…