Last-Minute Plans: 100 Free, Cheap & Easy Things To Do In Seattle This Weekend: June 1-3, 2018 A Sailor Moon Cosplay Tea Party, Pre-Pride Clean-up, HONK! Fest West, and Other Events for $10 or Less

Shutterstock Start off Orca Month with a beach party celebrating our splashy cetacean friends.

Panicking because you haven't yet made plans for the weekend and you're short on cash? Don't worry—below, find all of your options for last-minute entertainment that won't cost more than $10, ranging from festivals like Downstream, Bite of Greece, and HONK! Fest West to Pride kick-off events like Elysian's GLITTERis Pride Ale Release Party, the PhinneyWood Pride Rainbow Hop, and the Capitol Hill Pride Cleanup. For even more options, check out our complete Things To Do calendar.

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Note: Since all Ticketfly systems are down, certain ticket links below may not be immediately accessible.

FRIDAY

1. 10-Year Anniversary

The beguiling art space and bar will mark its 10th year, which, as they point out, is "over 51 in Cap Hill years." There'll be raffles for gift cards, tunes selected by Wizdumb and DJ Brian C, cake, and grab bags for the first 25 guests.

(Capitol Hill, free)

2. For Charleena: Amplifying Black Womxn's Voices

Black womxn will lead the community in remembrance of Charleena Lyles, who was shot by police last year, in a poetry/art/music/fashion/storytelling show headed by artist Wynn Adele and Youngstown representative Erika Bell. Charleena's sister Monika and other family members will be there.

(West Seattle, $5 suggested donation)

3. Fremont First Friday

Hike up and down the hills of Seattle's self-proclaimed weirdest neighborhood/center of the universe and immerse yourself in local art shows and installations, indoors and out (be sure to stop by the Troll, Lenin, and the Rocket). Food trucks will be stationed within easy reach. Venues include Canvas! Paint.Sip.Studio, ArtFX Gallery, evo Timesinfinity Gallery, West of Lenin, and Frame-Up Studios.

(Fremont, free)

4. Nuclear Lands: A History of Plutonium

This film tracks the origin and uses of plutonium (from material from military to civilian) by exploring sites in Washington State, France, and Northern Japan. After the film, UW public health students will present their research on the Hanford nuclear site's activity this past year.

(University District, free)

5. GLITTERis Pride Ale Release Party

As the official beer sponsors of Seattle Pride, Elysian brewers concocted a special fruit-forward ale by adding blackberry and raspberry purees to the fermenter. Sip it for yourself while you dance to beats from KEXP DJ Riz Rollins.

(Capitol Hill, free)

6. Diminished Men, the Sheen, Idol Ko Si

The combined cumulative accomplishments of Idol Ko Si's three members could constitute a fairly exhaustive history of Seattle's underground rock scene over the last 25 years. Bassist Min Yee, guitarist Robert Millis, and drummer Matthew Ford's uncanny instincts for unusual song structures and strange textures culminate in this new supergroup, as evidenced by their self-titled debut album, which you can hear on their Bandcamp page. If Idol Ko Si resembles anything from the trio's vast collective catalog, it might be Factums' Gilding the Lilies: post-punk messthetics alchemized into a murky, intriguing species of alien songcraft that baffles attempts to categorize it. Such subterranean otherness is rare and precious indeed. DAVE SEGAL

(University District, $8)

7. La Fille, The Regrets, Coach Phillips

Self-described as "not a bummer," indie band La Fille will be joined by like-sounded rock and pop groups the Regrets and Cocah Phillips.

(Ballard, $8)

8. Leif Totusek 1-2-3

Enjoy a night of jazz with Leif Totusek on guitar, Larry Jones on drums, and Phil Sparks on bass.

(Green Lake, free)

9. Machine Animal, Second Hand Suits, Oliver Elf Army

Bellingham good-timers Machine Animal make "bonehead rock," which makes them perfect for a party at Darrell's with Second Hand Suits and Oliver Elf Army.

(Shoreline, $10)

10. The Requisite, Life As Cinema, Moments

Seattle-based alt-rockers the Requisite will headline out in Fremont with support from Life As Cinema and Moments.

(Fremont, $8/$10)

11. Smooth Sailing, Slow Code, Post/Boredom, Slumberbox

Seattle-based punk-metal hybrid sextuplet Smooth Sailing describe their music as "sonic story telling," and they'll be joined by Slow Code, Post/Boredom, and Slumberbox in those efforts.

(Ballard, $10)

12. Tim McBride and the Divide, The Civilians, The Loveless Building

Seattle country rockers Tim McBride and the Divide will share the stage with the Civilians and the Loveless Building.

(Georgetown, $7)

13. August Strindberg's 'Miss Julie'

Before Rob Melrose's adaptation of August Strindberg's 1888 famously misanthropic play Miss Julie premiers at San Francisco's Cutting Ball Theater, hear a staged reading led by Bay Area artists Ariel Craft and Megan Cohen.

(Ballard, free)

14. Drag Queen Storytelling With Kara Sutra

Local queen Kara Sutra will tell stories to you and your kids in the downtown courtyard.

(Downtown, free)

15. Cascadia Mag’s Almost Summer Reading

Cascadia literary magazine will host its first-ever public event with readings by tip-top local talent: Donna Miscolta (Hola and Good-bye) and Anca Szilagyi (Daughters of the Air) with new fiction, Michael Schmeltzer and Montreux Rotholt with poetry, Niki Stojnic and Matt Stangel with news stories, and photography by Daniel Hawkins.

(Capitol Hill, free)

16. Elgin Baylor

Before original NBA legend Elgin Baylor spent his golden years with the Los Angeles Lakers, he played for Seattle University in the 1950s. He'll return to sign copies of his latest memoir, Hang Time: My Life in Basketball, co-written with Alan Eisenstock.

(Capitol Hill, free)

17. Fine White Powders - Slam Poetry & Pulp Storytelling

Slam poet Naughty Mouse will share narrative poetry that deals with everything from dessert to the war on drugs.

(West Seattle, free)

FRIDAY-SATURDAY

18. Aaron Brady: The Color of Breathing

Aaron Brady's ghostly style will likely lend itself to this work addressing "collective asphyxiation caused by our toxic environment."

(Pioneer Square, free)

Closing Saturday

19. Cathy Woo and Jacqui Beck

This gallery teases "an explosion of color and talent in mixed media" by contemporary artists Cathy Woo and Jacqui Beck.

(Pioneer Square, free)

Closing Saturday

20. Gosha Levochkin: Overworshipped

In this series, Gosha Levochkin features string-cheese-like characters with big boots, tall hats, and wide eyes who find themselves in inexplicable predicaments. New York–based, Moscow-born Levochkin paints them in gouache and watercolor, following the ligne clair (Tintin) tradition with bold colors, even lines, and no hatching. They evoke classic 2-D animation (Levochkin worked in a Korean animation studio for seven years), outsider art, and surrealism. The pictures seem like panels in a never-ending comic book, or stills from a maniacal Nickelodeon cartoon that probably shouldn't be shown to kids. In one, a stringy-person takes a selfie with a noose around its shapeless neck, rump, pertly out-thrust, as a tiny alien rides its back. It sounds like satire, but the effect is even weirder, as if whimsical imaginary friends from childhood had come of age in a hellscape. JOULE ZELMAN

(Pioneer Square, free)

Closing Saturday

21. Graduation Exhibition Reception + Open House: Photomedia

Check out UW's photomedia BFA program and see students' work.

(University District, free)

Closing Saturday

22. Interregnum

The word "interregnum" refers to the chaotic period between two regimes. The Scottish/American Yuck 'n Yum zine collective, which stopped publishing its quarterly in 2013, returns to release a Zine Compendium and to spotlight artists "currently navigating this strange new world and trying to make sense" of turmoil across nations. Alongside the release, the magazine—represented by Morgan Cahn, Ben Robinson, and Alex Tobin—has chosen 10 multimedia artists to reflect upon Brexit, Trump, and other upheavals both personal and global. Darren Banks, Greer Pester, O.B. De Alessi, Thomas Moore, Valerie Norris and Lada Wilson, Holger Mohaupt, Janie Nicoll, Kirsty McKeown, and Lizz Brady will offer diverse pieces inspired by robots, linguistics, myths, newspapers, gender roles, and queerdom. JOULE ZELMAN

(Pioneer Square, free)

Closing Saturday

23. The Intersection of Art + Math

This show will feature artists who employ mathematical techniques and concepts, such as the golden ratio, fractals, and other patterns.

(Everett, free)

Closing Saturday

24. Iole Alessandrini: Your Own Halo

Artist Alessandrini's "printable halo" project in the back gallery is an exploration of the sacred aura and the difference between saintly beings and ordinary people. It asks the question: "What if we were a byte away from materializing the spirit?"

(Pioneer Square, free)

Closing Saturday

25. Jiro Yonezawa, Ann Wolff

Jiro Yonezawa crafts sculptures out of woven metal, thread, and bamboo that succeed in evoking folk craft and conceptualism. Ann Wolff is a German-born, Sweden-based sculptor and studio glass artist whose work has been exhibited all over the world.

(Downtown, free)

Closing Saturday

26. Joan Kimura: Print Exhibit Linoleum Cuts 1957-2018

See member artist Joan Kimura's linoleum prints.

(Pioneer Square, free)

Closing Saturday

27. Kelly Bjork: Gentle Cravings

Kelly Bjork begins her domestic portraits by going into her friends' homes and photographing them with their everyday surroundings. She then translates these photographs into dense interior worlds of floral patterns, blocks of color, and great leafy shapes. Her figures are simplified into a playful, distinctive style with an illustrator's eye for detail. We see them lounging, hugging, and sometimes even engaged in physical acts of love; the warmth of emotion translating into a vibrant palette of primary colors, cool pastels, and gridded contrasts. Bjork is the cofounder of stationery company Pilgrim Paper, and it's easy to see how her charming images translate into handmade cards and other tokens of affection. EMILY POTHAST

(Pioneer Square, free)

Closing Saturday

28. Khadija Tarver: A circle made by walking

This performance artist encourages viewer interaction with the artwork in a piece about "personal loss and grief." The exhibition is also a "practice space for a future larger performance in the artist's paternal home of Bermuda."

(Pioneer Square, free)

Closing Saturday

29. Kim Osgood: Edgelands

Mark spring with a viewing of Kim Osgood's still lifes of "flowers, birds, fruits and more."

(Downtown, free)

Closing Saturday

30. Robin Weiss

Robin Weiss will display plein air oil paintings of views of the city, including Pike Place Market and Pioneer Square.

(Pioneer Square, free)

Closing Saturday

31. Rufino Tamayo: Selected Etchings

Mexican painter and printmaker Rufino del Carmen Arellanes Tamayo, whose work spanned the 20th century, drew on abstract trends, indigenous art, figurative traditions, and European surrealism. His stint as head of the Department of Ethnographic Drawing at the Museo Nacional de Arqueología deepened his interest in pre-Columbian visual traditions. An anti-revolutionary, unlike other Mexican artists of his generation, Tamayo was discouraged both by the disregard of his more political contemporaries and by racist attitudes toward indigenous-descended artists, and as a young man left his home for New York and then Paris. Eventually, though, he won worldwide recognition and acclaim from intellectuals like Octavio Paz, and there is now a contemporary art museum named after him in Mexico City. This is a vital opportunity to discover the work of a major 20th-century artist. JOULE ZELMAN

(Pioneer Square, free)

Closing Saturday

32. Sally Cleveland: Paintings | Robert Schultz: Drawings

Landscape artist Sally Cleveland and creator of sensual drawings Robert Schultz will display work.

(Pioneer Square, free)

Closing Saturday

33. Tim Cross

Tim Cross fashions elegant, canvas-filling floral designs whose intricacy induces calm and contemplation.

(Pioneer Square, free)

Closing Saturday

34. Tony Fitzpatrick: Selected Etchings

This iconographic art by the boxer Tony Fitzpatrick combines typography, animal images, and tattoo-inspired symbols in "etchings, lithographs and collages." His works dispense with perspective and realism in favor of bold graphics in webs of related images. Recommended for lovers of cartoon and comics aesthetics.

(Pioneer Square, free)

Closing Saturday

35. Burien Pride

The Burien Pride celebration will return for a second year for a fully day of inclusive fun. See live musical acts, shop for handmade crafts, sip drinks in a beer garden, graze from food trucks, and take in a drag performance. The day before the main event, stop by for a '70-themed, all-ages night of Drag Queen Bingo.

(Burien, free)

36. Neighborhood Exchange 2018

The Seattle Architecture Foundation will host free tours of unique community spaces throughout the summer. Each event will include a your, a presentation, and a small group discussion on how to implement a similar project in your community. This weekend includes an "underused land" tour with Alleycat Acres.

(Across Seattle, free)

37. Love Gangsters

Jazz musicians Eric Fridrich and Leif Totusek (aka the Love Gangsters) will play for you while you enjoy bistro fare.

(Mill Creek, free)

38. Northwest Terror Fest After Party

Enjoy an after party show after each night of Northwest Terror Fest with more thrashin' around on the hill.

(Capitol Hill, $10)

FRIDAY-SUNDAY

39. Chris Sweeney and Paul Tonnes: Myths & Monsters

Spook yourself out with some freakish art.

(Capitol Hill, free)

Closing Sunday

40. International Miniature Show

Peruse—and buy!—works of tiny art at this 26th annual juried show.

(Kirkland, free)

Closing Sunday

41. Le Carnaval Des Animaux

This group show features work by diverse artists inspired by the animal world, including pieces by accomplished surrealists and hyperrealists like Peter Ferguson, Travis Louie, Josie Morway, Scott Musgrove, Kari-Lise Alexander, Lola, Jim Blanchard, Jessica McCourt, and others.

(Capitol Hill, free)

Closing Sunday

42. Troy Gua: Immaculate Disasters

In 2011, Stranger critic Jen Graves wrote an article on Troy Gua that the artist then incorporated into a pee-themed installation called Pissing Contest. Gua usually plays with slick pop-culture surfaces and symbols as well as found materials, with an eye (and possibly a middle finger) to art history and criticism. For this show, he has drawn on something more peaceful: the vistas of the Northwest filtered through the sensibilities of ukiyo-e, the predominant form of Japanese figurative art from the 17th to 19th centuries. Gua borrows the aesthetic of balanced, simplified landscapes and adds his own glowering colors. By his own account, his aim to depict utopias "took an apocalyptic bend" over the course of the project—he now seems less preoccupied with pop than with the frightening beauty of potential planetary doom. JOULE ZELMAN

(Kirkland, free)

Opening Friday

43. Downstream Music Festival & Art Show

Substation promoter/festival organizer Tim Basaraba created Downstream Music Festival with the intention of supporting local outlier artists without the high ticket costs, big corporate backing, and structure of the Paul Allen–sponsored festival/persistent mold spore Upstream Music Fest. Downstream will host 28 acts and happen concurrently with Upstream, with 100 percent of the door split evenly among its artists. The initial requirement for playing Downstream? An official rejection from Upstream, of course. Downstream’s ads carry the phrase “Paul Allen is afraid of these bands,” and while it’s unlikely the billionaire was directly involved with the Upstream lineup or will hear these bands, this counter-fest was successful in booking weirdo-flag-flying bands like Pukesnake, Visceral Candy, and Hexengeist. Downstream boasts a wide range of genres, opening with metal and foraying into noise, experimental, hiphop, and rock bills. BRITTNIE FULLER

(Ballard, $10/day)

44. Edmonds Waterfront Festival

Hang out on the Edmonds waterfront to see live music shows, graze from food trucks, shop for arts and crafts, and see hydroplane and boat displays.

(Edmonds, $4)

45. Bite of Greece

At this free festival, stuff yourself with gyros, slow-roasted lamb sandwiches, chicken souvlaki, Greek salad, tiropita (filo pastry dough brushed with butter and layered with egg and feta cheese), and other authentic Mediterranean delights prepared by the community of the Greek Orthodox Church of the Assumption. There will also be dancing, music, and special performances. JULIANNE BELL

(Capitol Hill, free admission)

46. HONK! Fest West

This family-oriented festival gets you in on the brass, percussion, and street band "global renaissance." Twenty-five or more bands will jam in streets and parks around Seattle as they celebrate this democratic and ebullient musical genre.

(Across Seattle, free)

47. La Farce de Maître Pathelin

Special alert for French scholars: This theatrical reading by Le Theatre de Sans Souci of a late medieval farce will allow you to exercise your ear for (modern) French. Dr. Scott Taylor, a professor of the language at Western Washington University, will direct.

(Sodo, $10)

SATURDAY

48. Ten Percent Luck

Two improv groups (hosts Yeah Okay plus the witty and strange Death and Taxes) will do their comedic thang with instruction and suggestions by a featured stand-up comic (Dan O'Connell).

(Capitol Hill, $5)

49. Civic Saturday

Hear a "civic sermon" from Eric Liu and share your thoughts on how to better the community.

(Beacon Hill, free)

50. Heart in the Park Festival

This community-created festival is centered on heart health, with music, dancing, yoga, crafts vending, hula hooping, and art-making galore.

(Wallingford, free)

51. Horticulture Annual Plant Sale

Support Mercer Island students by purchasing plants they grew in their horticulture program from their very own greenhouse. Plants available for sale will include many varieties of herbs, vegetables, and flowers.

(Mercer Island, free)

52. Kent International Festival

This festival celebrates Kent and South King County's cultural diversity with music and dance performances, native attire, cultural booths, and authentic cuisine.

(Kent, free)

53. PhinneyWood Pride Rainbow Hop

The sixth-annual PhinneyWood Pride Rainbow Hop will host its usual slew of free and inclusive family activities along Greenwood Avenue, from Drag Queen Story Time to face painting to a concert with the Not-Its!.

(Greenwood, free)

54. Queen City - Inaugural Pop Up Market

Celebrate women-run businesses in the Northwest at this inaugural pop-up market hosted by Queen City. There will also be food, music, and possibly a wine tasting. They'll donate 10% of profits to the Jubilee Women's Center this go-round.

(Leschi, free)

55. Salsa & Sangria on Beacon Hill

Welcome summer by grooving to salsa jams and sipping sangria at the new community justice-focused Beacon Hill library.

(Beacon Hill, free)

56. Social Queer: Express Yourself Party

This Pride kick-off dance night implores you to wear whatever makes you feel most "you," be it full drag, a wedding dress, cowboy boots, or your pajamas.

(Montlake, free)

57. State Park Free Days

For a number of days throughout the year (like National Trails Day on June 2 and Veterans Day on Nov 11), get outside and take advantage of free admission to Washington State parks.

(Across Seattle, free)

58. Parke Diem

A full day of disc jockeying and dancing under (hopefully) sunny skies, Parke Diem features dance floor vets like Slynk, Lost Boys, Mode4 & Miss Min.D, Paradame, Korra the Kid, and many others, plus vendors of local art, goods, and food and live art stations with face painting, do-your-own, and more.

(Capitol Hill, free)

59. UHeights Summer Music Festival

Rather than one weekend overwhelmed with activity, University Heights will break their summer fun into two-hour sets every Saturday from June to September. Each weekend will feature live music from bands of every genre, world dance troupes, and children's shows. The whole series is free to the public, with food available from the U-District Farmers Market each weekend.

(University District, free)

60. Customer Appreciation Party

To express their gratitude for their customers, Alki dive Tug Inn will throw a bash with live music by 25 Cent Ride and the Tripp Rezac Band, raffle prizes and giveaways, drink specials, and free burgers and hot dogs with purchase of an alcoholic beverage.

(West Seattle, free admission)

61. FogRose Grand Opening

Liquid nitrogen ice cream boutique FogRose will celebrate its grand opening. Guests who post a picture at the event with the hashtag #fogrosebellevue will get a free ice cream on their next visit.

(Bellevue, free)

62. Herb and Food Fair

With the university's Medicinal Herb Garden in full bloom, the 20th annual Herb and Food Fair will celebrate "Foraging Community Health" through talks and workshops, cooking demos, guided walks, a medicinal and edible plant sale, live music, and, of course, homemade food.

(Kenmore, free admission)

63. Sailor Moon Cosplay Tea Party

Don the attire of your favorite Sailor Moon scout and sip tea with pinkies aloft at geek-themed tea shop Friday Afternoon. Sample exclusive new teas available for purchase, then capture your costume with a photo booth.

(Wallingford, free)

64. Composition Studio

Composition Studio occurs quarterly as a recital for new and innovative works by emerging composers known for exploring unconventional sonic possibilities. Guest musicians from the UW Modern Ensemble will act as support.

(University District, free)

65. Dweller on the Hill, Brandon Krebs, Frames in Motion

Seattle indie rockers Dweller on the Hill will play songs from their new EP, Yokva, which addresses "the hell that the West has brought to indigenous cultures across the world and how that very hell awaits the West itself." They'll be joined by Brandon Krebs and Frames in Motion.

(University District, $8)

66. Fynnie's Basement, Nurse Ratchett, Disposable Zeros

Seattle-based rockers Fynnie's Basement find their strength in change, with an open door policy for other musicians who want to join in for singular jam sessions, and switching instruments between band members to mix things up. They'll be joined by Nurse Ratchett and Disposable Zeros.

(West Seattle, $8)

67. Haute Sauce: PHNM

Portland-based DJ PHNM (Colin Rebey) will bring his highly danceable hiphop beats to Seattle.

(Capitol Hill, $10)

68. Hillside '77, Garagedogs, Wild Arms, Downtown

Local rock 'n' rollers Hillside '77 will take over the Fremont stage with fellow Seattle bands Wild Arms and Downtown, plus Garagedogs up from Mobile, Alabama.

(Fremont, $8/$10)

69. Mable's Marbles, Oil Can, Atomic Rust

Local punks Mable's Marbles will headline a show with tracks from their latest EP, with support sets by Oil Can and Atomic Rust.

(Tukwila, $7)

70. Stereo Creeps, Wes SP8 & The Apollo Proxy, The Sky Giants

Stereo Creeps will provide the scuzzy rock for the evening, and join psych-out forces with Wes SP8 & The Apollo Proxy, and the Sky Giants.

(Shoreline, $6)

71. Swinson and the Expedition

Before their bass player, Andre, moves away to Los Angeles, local noise rockers Swinson and the Expedition will play a farewell show.

(West Seattle, $5)

72. Botnik Live!

Join the geeky predictive-text pranksters of Botnik Studios (and their friends) for a night of readings, sketch comedy, songs, and interactive experiments.

(Capitol Hill, $7)

73. Elizabeth Fournier: The Green Burial Guidebook

Some people are choosing to buck the trends of the hyper-expensive conventional funeral and burial, which also involves carcinogenic formaldehyde in embalming fluid as well as tons of wood and metal. Find out how they're choosing environmentally alternatives for their own eventual eternity underground.

(Capitol Hill, free)

74. Food, Culture, and Obesity in Nicaragua

Discover the complexities of hunger and health with the question: "How can the second poorest country in the western hemisphere also suffer from an epidemic of obesity?" Dietitian and Bastyr alum Dan Fenyvesi, who's traveled looking for answers in Nicaragua and written a book, Food Sobriety, on his findings, will discuss.

(Kenmore, free)

75. Marisol Berríos-Miranda, Shannon Dudley, and Michelle Habell-Pallán: American Sabór

Join Marisol Berríos-Miranda, Shannon Dudley, and Michelle Habell-Pallán as they trace the Latinx influence on American popular music between World War II and the present.

(University District, free)

76. Bowling Club Open House

Want to knock down pins with some local pros? The Jefferson Park Lawn Bowling Club will host a free open house with music and prizes.

(Beacon Hill, free)

77. Freeform Dance Dance

Surprise yourself with dance moves you didn't know you had at this no-experience-necessary dance.

(North Seattle, $10)

78. National Learn to Row Day

Meet rowing coaches, tour the Fremont boathouse, and look into the club's Learn to Row programs.

(Fremont, free)

SATURDAY-SUNDAY

79. Artvocacy: Refugee Art Exhibit

Founded in 1988 in a decommissioned Trailways bus terminal in Westlake, Art/Not Terminal spent 25 years in a space owned by Capitol Hill Housing before establishing its current home at Seattle Center in July 2016. Completely volunteer staffed and sustained, the gallery's mission is to facilitate accessibility for both artists and patrons through non-juried exhibitions in which anyone—regardless of artistic training or sales history—is invited to hang artwork in a professional context. Each month, A/NT partners with a different nonprofit organization to create a context aimed at the cultivation of physical, mental, and emotional well-being through self-expression. In June, the gallery will be devoted to art that reflects the refugee experience. EMILY POTHAST

(Seattle Center, free)

Opening Saturday

80. {Machines of becoming}

Seven artists in the DXARTS 472: Mechatronic Art, Design and Fabrication II course at UW will reveal their talents in installations, performances, and more.

(Mount Baker, free)

81. United Indians Art Markets

Peruse affordable jewelry, wood goods, drums, clothing, and more by Native artists.

(Magnolia, free)

82. Oddmall Emporium of the Weird

Shop arts, crafts, and oddities for your peculiar collections at this annual weirdo market.

(Monroe, free admission)

83. 2018 Chittenden Locks Summer Concert Series

June through September, enjoy live music performances from symphonic bands, show choirs, jazz trios, and more in the gardens by the Ballard Locks.

(Ballard, free)

84. Duvall Days

Established in 1960, this summer festival celebrates the "small town/real life" community of Duvall. The two-day event begins with a parade, followed by live music and dance performances, vendor booths, art demonstrations, a beer garden, a car show, and a firefighter pancake breakfast.

(Duvall, free)

85. Pagdiriwang Philippine Festival

This series of workshops, exhibits, demonstrations, and performances highlights Filipino history, art, and culture.

(Seattle Center, free)

86. Diwa Filipino Film Showcase 2018

These short films reveal queer stories, love stories, painted stories, Saudi stories, and more by Filipino and Filipino diaspora creators.

(Seattle Center, free)

SUNDAY

87. Everybody Every Body Fashion Show

Admire fashions worn by models with diverse body types at this celebration of self-love.

(University District, free)

88. Musical: Stephen Sondheim Improvised

Using audience suggestions, the cast will improvise a brand-new musical based on the work of Stephen Sondheim, the genius responsible for Into the Woods, Sweeney Todd, Company, Sunday in the Park with George, and more. It's an almost insanely ambitious concept to try to match Sondheim off-the-cuff, so check out UP performers using every ounce of their wits and skills.

(Downtown, $10)

Closing Sunday

89. Clean Sweep 2018: Capitol Hill Pride Cleanup

Make sure Capitol Hill is spick and span for PrideFest by volunteering to clean up the streets with in a group of eight to 10 people. You'll get a t-shirt, food, and chances to win cool prizes from local businesses.

(Capitol Hill, free)

90. Farm Work Day!

Spend the day clearing weeds, planting vegetable starts, and tilling new beds at the Beacon Hill community farm.

(Beacon Hill, free)

91. Orca Month Kick-Off Celebration

Join the Orca Salmon Alliance for an Orca Month celebration that promises music, face painting, Mike the 25-foot-tall inflatable orca, speakers, storytellers, sand sculpting on the beach, and more.

(Ballard, free)

92. Steve McQueen Documentary Film

The Historic Everett Theatre will put on a free documentary screening, telling the life story of actor Steve McQueen.

(Ballard, free)

93. Heartbeat Silent Disco

Dance to tunes of your choice from DJs Ocyris, Kezaki, Cat Passidy, and Hanz Disco while you watch the sun set.

(Wallingford, $7)

94. In Shades, Waking Things, Tiger Rider, Public Theatre

South Texas emo indie rockers In Shades will headline in Eastlake with bill support from Waking Things, Tiger Rider, and Public Theatre.

(Eastlake, $8)

95. Jay Fiddy, Thomas Joseph, St P@

Auburn's Jay Fiddy, who opened for Wyclef Jean in April, will "bring the good vibes to hiphop" for his first headlining show. He'll share the bill with Thomas Joseph, and St P@.

(Fremont, $6/$8)

96. Jean Chalant, Lorain, Rainwater

Indie popper Jean Chalant will share their basement feels with opening sets from Lorain and Rainwater.

(Ballard, $8)

97. KEXP DJ Summer Series at Brewlab

Spend your summer Sundays grooving to tunes from KEXP DJs Abbie and Atticus while you sip a hazy grapefruit "Abbicus" IPA brewed just for the occasion.

(Capitol Hill, free)

98. Hugo House Student Reading with Theo Pauline Nestor

Students in Hugo House's yearlong manuscript class for memoirists will read pieces of their works-in-progress. Instructor Theo Pauline Nestor (Writing Is My Drink) will introduce them.

(Capitol Hill, free)

99. Wendy Wahman: Nanny Paws Book Release

Wendy Wahman will share a reading from her brand-new cute kids' book about a "helpful" pooch.

(University District, free)

100. Bicycle Sundays

A section of Lake Washington Boulevard between the Seward Park entrance and Mount Baker Park’s beach will be closed to cars and motorcycles from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Sundays. Meet in the park's lower meadow to peddle along the route with a group.

(Rainier Valley, free)

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