![]() Admission is free and ticket reservations are recommended, but not required.ĥ. The Holiday Art Market at the Foothills Art Center kicks off this Saturday! This event runs through December 29 and will feature works from over 100 Colorado artists. Want more? Check out the Holiday Art Market in Golden The market is free and opened daily through Dec. Explore alleys of wooden huts filled with unique gifts and delicious treats, all while enjoying live holiday music. The Denver Christkindlmarket kicks off this Friday a Civic Center Park! The Christkindlemarket has been Colorado’s only authentic German Market for over 20 years. Looking for a holiday market? Check out the Denver Christkindlmarket Starting this Friday, head to the Gaylord Rockies Resort and Convention Center for a Christmas and explore acres of lights, holiday shows, snow tubing, gingerbread decorating, and more! Don’t forget to check out their new original experience, Mission: Save Christmas Featuring Elf™️, where you can journey through the world of Buddy the Elf and help save the holidays! Get your tickets today.ģ. Gather your friends and family and celebrate Christmas at Gaylord Rockies. ![]() Get in the Christmas spirit at Gaylord Rockies The LIVE nights will include activities, performances, vendors and more! Winter Wonderlights is free and open to the public, but visitors are encouraged to bring and donate canned food to benefit the Food Bank for Larimer County.Ģ. Don’t miss out on Winter Wonderlights LIVE events that will take place on select nights throughout November and December. Winter Wonderlights in Loveland is in full swing! Wander through the park’s light displays and enjoy 30-minute music and light shows every night. Here are our picks for the 7 best things to do in the Denver metro area and beyond this weekend. For all the latest dining intel, subscribe to Eater Denver’s newsletter.DENVER - Every weekend, Denver7 compiles a list of some fun events you might enjoy. And typically, it doesn’t include restaurants that are currently on the Eater Denver Heatmap, although there are some exceptions in this edition. It also does not include bars, which have their own map, as do bakeries. ![]() Note, too, that while the map - which is organized geographically from north to south - may include the occasional Boulder establishment as well as food trucks and pop-ups with fixed addresses, it does not include mobile vendors (so here’s a shoutout to stars in that category like Mukja and Little Arthur’s Hoagies). ![]() The fact that it can’t include every place fitting those descriptions is the nature of the beast removal from the Eater 38 doesn’t mean that a restaurant isn’t still important and won’t return in the future. Spanning a variety of cuisine types, price points, and neighborhoods, it centers on the cornerstones of the landscape - hence the word “essential” - while highlighting more recent arrivals that are extending Denver’s horizons. Since its launch in 2012, this map has traced the city’s evolution from what many outsiders dismissed as a cowtown to an ever-growing, prismatic dining destination that has earned a place in the national conversation for its youthful energy and freewheeling creativity.Īny given update, then, is designed to reflect what’s defining and redefining the scene now. Welcome to the Eater 38, a seasonally updated guide to restaurants that represent the growth and ingenuity of Denver’s culinary community.
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