Rachel Hart

Hero Factory: Previewing the December 2012 Issue

Hero Factory: Previewing the December 2012 Issue

Our editor-in-chief reflects on the bigger picture of the latest issue of Seattle magazine.

There’s nothing more unsettling in an editor’s world than sending a big, best-y Best of the Year issue to the printer—complete with adulations of the most influential people of 2012—mere days before a nail-biting election in which we’re voting for a president and a governor, among other things, including a historic piece of civil rights…

Home Plate: Previewing the November 2012 Issue

Home Plate: Previewing the November 2012 Issue

Editorial director Rachel Hart reflects on the bigger picture of our latest issue.

The discussions we have as we select images for our food covers are always a little amusing—and maybe a little less than appetizing. “We can’t put that on our cover—it’s foaming at the mouth.” “Is that a cell phone under that food?” “Are those ears on that plate?” The dish that ultimately lands on our…

Epical Epicness: Introducing the 2012 October Issue

Epical Epicness: Introducing the 2012 October Issue

Editorial director Rachel Hart reflects on the bigger picture of our latest issue.

When we were coming up with a list of adjectives to describe the beauty and grandeur of Northwest lodges, a word used in excess these days by my 10-year-old son (and further creatively mangled by him, as in the headline, above) kept coming to mind. It was undeniable: “Epic” is the only word that does…

The People in Your Neighborhood

The People in Your Neighborhood

Our editorial director reflects on the September issue.

My husband grew up in New York City, but wanted to escape what he calls “the hustle.” Though I was born in Washington, I grew up in suburban Racine, Wisconsin, and longed for city life. (Any chance I’d get, I’d head to Chicago, just 45 minutes away; it’s still one of my favorite cities in…

Swinging from the Vines

Swinging from the Vines

Editorial director Rachel Hart reflects on growth: both good bad.

It’s that time of year when Seattle’s gardens are in full bloom—or in my case, bloomed, spent and in desperate need of a good watering and dead foliage trimming. This was one of the lushest seasons I recall in recent memory, at least in the microcosm that is my Ballard backyard. Everything seemed to be…

Global Warming

Global Warming

With rejuvenation and rediscovery comes self-examination.

Our city is in the midst of a multidisciplinary—dare we say postrecession—renaissance. The 50th anniversary of the Space Needle and the opening of Chihuly Garden and Glass have reinvigorated the city’s creative spark, getting many of the most jaded cynics excited again. The Pike Place Market remodel is complete, and it’s all gussied up in…

Those Summer Nights

Those Summer Nights

Editorial director Rachel Hart reflects on the endless possibilities summer presents us.

Come late spring, the yearning begins for the days when the sunlight lingers past 9 p.m., the air gets (a little) warmer and my family finally emerges from hibernation inside our cozy 1,400-square-foot home. These are the days when our back door is constantly open, our kids are running in and out, and we gain…

Small Towns, Epic Adventures

Small Towns, Epic Adventures

Editorial director Rachel Hart reflects on the big discoveries we can make on even small side-trips

Sometimes in the process of producing an issue, our editors inadvertently create a “word of the issue”—a word (or words) that we are suddenly, unintentionally in love with, so much so that it pops up repeatedly throughout a story (if not the entire issue). This especially happens in stories with multiple writers, such as this…

How to Determine the Best Restaurants?

How to Determine the Best Restaurants?

Our editorial director reflects on the stomach-churning worry and care that went into this year's sp

Three things are very important when we produce our Best Restaurants issue: 1) The story must reflect how we dine out locally now, (oh, how fun it would have been to cover the 50s and 60s eras of wedge salads and fancy Jell-O desserts!); 2) it must include a mix of affordable and fine dining…

Moving Right Along

Moving Right Along

Our fearless editorial director reflects on Seattle's once stalled and, now, shockingly inevitable t

I knew when our youngest son got the birthday party invitation in January that it was time to bite the bullet. The party was in Bellevue, which meant crossing the bridge, and that meant finally getting one of those bridge-toll passes (or start paying through the nose for Container Store runs and trips to Woodinville…

A World of Difference

A World of Difference

Our fearless editorial director reflects on the 1962 World's Fair and the lasting optimism it brough

In 2006, when we produced an anniversary issue celebrating this magazine’s 40-year evolution from Pacific Search, to Pacific Northwest, to Seattle Home and Garden to the Seattle mag you’re reading today, we invited local notables to write about the key events and people responsible for shaping our city over the last 40 years. A common…

Meat of the Matter

Meat of the Matter

Our fearless editorial director reflects on the power of the perfect burger.

Although technically it didn’t get its start here, the burger has become the ultimate American dish, and I love seeing how the iconic sandwich has evolved in different cities across the country. In L.A., you’ll invariably find an option served with a pile of avocado slices. In Wisconsin, land of plentiful beef and cheese, cheeseburgers…

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