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Festivals in Atlanta. The annual Atlanta Dogwood Festival, held in Piedmont Park. Virginia Highland Summerfest. Atlanta St. Patrick's Day Parade on Peachtree Street, 2013. Dragon Con parade. The Peachtree Road Race. Atlanta's mild climate and plentiful trees allow for festivals and events to take place in the city year-round.
International Black Women's Film Festival. Mill Valley Film Festival. Palo Alto International Film Festival. San Francisco Frozen Film Festival. San Francisco Green Film Festival. San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival. San Francisco International Film Festival. San Francisco International Lesbian and Gay Film Festival.
The Atlanta Dogwood Festival is an arts and crafts festival held each spring at Piedmont Park in Atlanta, Georgia, established in 1933. Originally held for nine days across two weekends and the weekdays between, it is now held only one weekend during early April, when the native flowering dogwood trees are in bloom. The festival attracts ...
Taste of the Bay Area" featured 85 restaurants and more than 100 wines were offered at Wine Lands. [46] Outside Lands was held on August 5–7, 2022. A "festival within a festival," [47] artists including Green Day, Post Malone, SZA, Phoebe Bridgers, Weezer, Jack Harlow and Kim Petras performed. The first tickets released sold out in 30 minutes.
There’s music in the air across Macon Saturday with not one but two free outdoor events: the first-ever All Blues Music and Arts Revival and the 20th Jazz and Arts on Riverdale.
The Half Moon Bay Art and Pumpkin Festival is a two-day event held the following Saturday and Sunday, from 1971 to 2019, and since 2022. The COVID-19 pandemic caused the festival to be canceled in 2020; the 50th was deferred to 2021. [1] In 2021 the festival was again canceled, although there was a pumpkin weigh-off.
Summerfest is an annual arts festival in the Virginia–Highland neighborhood of Intown Atlanta, taking place on two days in June each year. It is one of the largest art festivals in the Southeastern United States, typically attended by more than 50,000 visitors and showcasing more than 200 artists from across the region. [1]
The National Black Arts Festival (NBAF) is an organization based in Atlanta, Georgia, founded in 1987. [1] [2] It was originally a one-week long summer festival which was held biennially starting in 1998. [1]