Souvenir shops used to sell shirts deprecatingly promoting the fake “Seattle Rain Festival,” running from January 1 to December 31. But realistically, the rain stops in late spring, and the local event calendar revs up. From May to September, festivals and fairs pack the weekends and crowds fill the parks, theaters, and arenas to eat local food, see amazing art, listen to live music, and celebrate everything.
The country’s largest folk festival takes over the Seattle Center campus each Memorial Day weekend, unofficially kicking off summer in the city with three days of folk traditional music and art. The laid-back festival costs nothing to attend (though operates on donations, so bring a few bucks to drop in a bucket), which only adds to the relaxed vibes as people aimlessly wander among the more than 6,000 performers. Amid the 20 stages, 200 booths serve food and sell crafts, while elsewhere, artists give hands-on demonstrations of their skills.
Seattle hardly ever dresses up and often pretends not to care about anything new or cool, but the city lights up a little when this top film festival comes to town for three weeks each May. The festival leans into the “international” aspect of the name, drawing entrants from 80 countries around the world, and presenting attendees sometimes with the theatrical screening of a film. The hundreds of independent and international shorts, documentaries, and feature films play at SIFF’s own three cinemas, plus a handful of other venues scattered around town.
The rainbow crosswalks of Capitol Hill usually get a touch-up before Pride Month begins in June, and the party celebrating the LGBTQ+ community lasts all month. But at the end of the month, on the anniversary of the Stonewall Riots, it culminates with Pride Weekend, a parade, and PrideFest on Capitol Hill and at Seattle Center. Big dance parties follow and smaller, informal events all over town cater to various identities. Basically, Capitol Hill becomes a huge, 72-hour, all-out bacchanal full of color, in honor of the freedom to be who you are and love who you want.
This mid-summer festival turns Seattle Center into a gourmand’s dream, with more than 200 food and drink vendors selling their specialties to hungry attendees. Live music, cooking demonstrations, and a beer garden set up on the various lawns keep people occupied between bites. Each year, the exact format changes a little bit, but the festival is always free to enter, and vendors often offer a low-cost “bite-size” item on their menu to allow people to sample as many different nibbles as possible.
Any music-lover visiting Seattle needs to see a live show at one of Capitol Hill’s small venues, which have shaped the city’s soundscape for years. This summer festival makes it easy to see all of them, as the three-day event shuts down part of Pike Street around 10th Avenue and sets up nine stages, including all-ages outdoor stages and in the surrounding clubs, like Neumos and the Cha Cha. The lineup features local and national acts across genres, but is generally aimed at a young adult crowd, with a tilt toward electronic music.
Whether or not you plan to attend Seafair, pay attention to the dates: The combination of bridge closures for the airshow, good weather, and big events makes it traditionally one of the worst traffic weeks of the year. Pack your patience!
In a city surrounded by water, it only makes sense for a summer festival to happen almost entirely on a lake. Throughout the summer, Seafair runs a series of small cultural festivals, but the big to-do happens in August when the Blue Angels swoop overhead and the hydroplanes race around the southern corner of Lake Washington. The big party happens on boats that camp out on the “Log Boom” in the middle of the lake and at Genesee Park, but all the beaches and parks throughout South Seattle attract boisterous crowds.
Just as the Folklife Festival unofficially kicks off the summer with art and music at Seattle Center on Memorial Day Weekend, Bumbershoot helps the city say goodbye to the season over Labor Day weekend with the same. But while Folklife skews traditional, Bumbershoot covers everything: national bands headlining at packed, arena-sized venues; modern dance; drag; and even a cat circus. Though it’s shrunk from its four-day heyday, it still packs a powerful schedule into two days, with a focus on local and lesser-known arts that keep it fresh.
The Puyallup Fair is a delightfully absurd combination of sugar, nostalgia, and excess, best enjoyed with total earnestness.
Mention “the fair” to any local and standby for them to sing “Do the Puyallup,” the old advertising jingle for Washington’s state fair, which helps with pronunciation of the exurb 45 minutes from Seattle: “You can do it at a trot, you can do it at a gallop, you can do it real slow so your heart won’t palpitate. Just don’t be late. Do the Puyallup.” Then they might start nattering excitedly about wiener dog races and scones. For 20 days each September, one of the largest state fairs in the country covers the 165-acre fairgrounds in agricultural and craft displays, animal showcases, a rodeo, national music acts, and carnival rides.
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