Seattle Mag

Seattle's German Food Invasion

Seattle’s German Food Invasion

Several new German-themed restaurants in Seattle give diners the chance to pick a wiener.

Seattle’s German-pub-loving Chris Navarra—owner of popular bier destinations Feierabend and Prost!—is in good company these days. German hot spots are cropping up all over town, saving you a trek to Leavenworth (or Berlin) for German grub. Don’t let the name fool you: The Wurst Place (510 Westlake Ave. N; 206.223.5528; thewurstplace.com) may just be the…

Greenwood's Made Sewing Studio

Greenwood’s Made Sewing Studio

This new SYO (sew your own) studio invites novices and expert seamsters to rent machines, take class

Sewing shouldn’t be just for pros—or just for those who own fancy equipment. So say the creators of Made, a fully equipped sewing studio and retail space in Greenwood (8408 Greenwood Ave. N; 206.552.9632; madesewing.com). Open since November, Made offers plenty of sewing machines to rent, worktables to spread out on and, in case you…

Burn Design Lab's Eco Stoves

Burn Design Lab’s Eco Stoves

A Vashon Island company is saving lives—and the planet—one stove at a time.

In a design studio on Vashon Island, Peter Scott is cooking up solutions to big problems. His company, Burn Design Lab, is on a mission to reduce global warming and respiratory illness by creating highly efficient and affordable stoves that can replace the open-fire cooking pits used in developing countries. Those pits pump out emissions…

Personalized Pillows from PillowMob

Personalized Pillows from PillowMob

A Capitol Hill company makes your face puffy--in a good way.

Forget Photoshop: If you can’t be there for family photos at the reunion this summer, send a head-size pillow with your face on it instead. Open since August and headquartered on Capitol Hill, PillowMob puts a high-res image of your lovely mug on a circular- or oval-shaped pillow ($25, includes shipping), sewn on-site. Creative pillow…

A Real Tricorder on the Horizon?

A Real Tricorder on the Horizon?

A health scanner similar to the one McCoy used on 'Star Trek' may be in the works.

Proving once again that science fiction can generate science fact (given enough time and money), the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation recently partnered with Grand Challenges Canada (a nonprofit health organization) to pony up $38.5 million to fund the invention of a health diagnostic tool not unlike Dr. McCoy’s “tricorder” from the original Star Trek…

Jean Griffith, Seattle’s Patron Saint of Pottery

Jean Griffith, Seattle’s Patron Saint of Pottery

It took just one ceramics class at the UW to inspire this clay maven to cofound Pottery Northwest.

If you’ve ever considered taking a pottery class, heed this gentle warning from local clay maven Jean Griffith: “All you have to do is touch it and you’re hooked.” She would know. After casually taking a ceramics class at UW in 1957, the now 93-year-old Griffith ended up cofounding Pottery Northwest in 1966 and serving…

Bird Lovers: Head to Sequim this Spring

Bird Lovers: Head to Sequim this Spring

The Olympic BirdFest with the Olympic Peninsula Audubon Society kicks off March 30.

WHERE: Sequim, Washington. WHY: For the Olympic BirdFest with the Olympic Peninsula Audubon Society (3/30–4/1; times and prices vary. Dungeness River Audubon Society, 2151 W Hendrickson Road; 360.681.4076; olympicbirdfest.org). The annual celebration offers beginner and advanced birders the chance to search for such fine feathered friends as the yellow-rumped warbler and the elusive marbled godwit,…

Real Estate: Three Seattle Craftsman Homes

Real Estate: Three Seattle Craftsman Homes

The iconic Seattle home makes a strong showing in three local neighborhoods.

Craftsman homes first started appearing in Seattle around 1900 as an offshoot of the British Arts and Crafts movement, which emphasized the handmade over the mass-produced, and design simplicity over the ornate Victorian homes of the era. Found in neighborhoods all across Seattle, especially Capitol Hill, Queen Anne, Leschi, West Seattle and Wallingford, the Craftsman…

Melissa Vail’s Cheeky New Bracelets

Melissa Vail’s Cheeky New Bracelets

A local designer's refreshing spin on the classic gilded tennis bracelet design.

Go giddy piling on Ballard-based crafter (and former Seattle mag publisher) Melissa Vail Coffman’s “badminton bracelets,” a cheeky take on the classic gilded tennis design. Hand-beaded with glass, silver and colored crystals, the slinky wristlets are available in an array of bead finishes, which range from antique to a diamond-like shine (in case you can’t…

Wraphabillement's Wundercoat!

Wraphabillement’s Wundercoat!

A savvy new coat line brings you outerwear that multitasks as well as you do.

When Elizabeth Roberts, a former Microsoft recruiter, philanthropist and busy mom of three, added yet another accolade to her résumé with a fashion line late in 2011, she blamed it on her iPhone. “Our phones work harder than ever and do so many different things,” she explains. “I started to wonder why none of my…

Deals on Rosanna Dishes

Deals on Rosanna Dishes

The popular tableware outfitter now has an outlet store in Georgetown.

Rosanna tableware fans, take a deep, cleansing breath: For years, Rosanna Bowles’ flash sales on her popular dishware sets have been the stuff of shopping legend. Legions of fans line up early to snag deals on glassware, mug gift sets and dinnerware—all while trying to avoid flying elbows. But we can shop sans shoving now…

A Yarn Bomb Hits Redmond

A Yarn Bomb Hits Redmond

Seattle artist Suzanne Tidwell festoons Anderson Park trees with festive knitwear.

If you spent any time in Pioneer Square’s Occidental Park last summer, you noticed the trees were a bit warmer and cozier than usual, their trunks wrapped in brightly striped sweaters. The trend—known as “yarn bombing”—is happening nationally, with avant-garde crafters knitting thousands of rows with which to wrap utility poles, parking meters, park benches…

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