How to Responsibly Celebrate Pride As an Ally

 
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It’s important for allies to show out to Pride, but it’s equally important to show out in the right way.

LGBTQ community members are not the only ones preparing for this weekend’s Denver Pride. Queer allies, too, are excited to show their support for the community by attending the virtual march and in-person festivities at “Pride Hubs” sprinkled throughout the city. Queer advocacy leaders welcome the presence of allies who play a role in advancing Pride’s goals.

“One of the primary reasons [to have Pride] is just, simply, visibility, and I think allies are definitely a part of that,” says Rex Fuller, CEO of the Center on Colfax which organizes Denver Pride. “Seeing both other LGBT folks and their friends and families gives people a greater sense of security.” Nevertheless, Pride is still an event held by and for queer people, so allies should ensure that their participation is respectful and responsible. For those wanting to learn more about how to achieve this, we’ve got you covered.

Understand Pride’s History

Pride began as a protest. Many allies are aware of the 1969 Stonewall riots, which are often credited as sparking the modern LGBTQ rights movement. But the history extends much further than that. Nadine Bridges, executive director of One Colorado, acknowledges the 1966 Compton Cafeteria riot in San Francisco as a lesser-known but equally important moment in queer history. “Those were Black and Brown folks, transgender folks, who, with bricks and stones and fire, came out to say, ‘This is who we are,’” says Bridges. Understanding this history is crucial to appreciating the fight for modern-day queer rights. It informs how Pride still evolves, too. Case in point: The Compton’s Cafeteria riot, like those at Stonewall, were in response to police harassment and abuse, and Denver LGBTQ leaders point to such violence as a reason why Denver Pride has chosen to remove the presence of law enforcement this year.

Be Aware of the Space You Occupy

Spaces designated for queer people are still a precious resource. So awareness is key. Help ensure you don’t take up too much space within them if you do not belong to the identities they’re designed for. Bridges notes that this does not only apply to cisgender, heterosexual allies at queer events. She says: “If you are a white person in a Black and Brown event, just remember that there’s not many spaces for us.” How does one maintain this respect? According to Bridges, it’s about fully allowing the people of that space to be themselves and not being too forward in your own behavior.

Respect the Identity of Others

Queer advocacy leaders like Levi Teachey, president of Parents, Families, and Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG) Denver, reminds allies to use proper pronouns and gender-neutral language at Pride. If you make a mistake, the proper way to respond is to quickly correct yourself and move on. Respecting queer identities also entails recognizing that the community is not a monolith. Certain intersectional identities need more uplifting and attention. Rex Fuller points out that queer community members who are BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and people of color), or have disabilities, are frequently dismissed, as well as those that identify as bisexual. Furthermore, Bridges notes that the intergenerational nature of the LGBTQ community should be celebrated, saying that both queer youth and older adults need to be kept at the table.

Maintain the Work Year-Round

The tenet of respecting identities applies beyond Pride. Teachey invites allies to employ these tactics—including introducing one’s own pronouns—to other settings as a way to normalize them. Other methods to maintain effective allyship include advocating for LGBTQ-supporting legislation by voting and contacting legislators. Lastly, take advantage of resources like PFLAG, which offer support groups and other programming for allies close to queer community members.


Spend Your Money Wisely

Simon Paul, Denver drag king and board member of We Are Family Colorado, says that financial support is one of the best ways to directly impact queer community members. Many queer performers can receive tips over Venmo or Cash App, but if you are able to do so, it’s smart to keep enough cash on you to tip each performer a few dollar bills. Furthermore, Simon mentions that not all Pride-related merchandise is created equal. “Don’t just go for the free stuff from corporations,” he says, advising allies to stick to queer-owned stores and restaurants.

Ask for Consent

If you’re at a drag performance, enthusiasm is absolutely welcome; performers like Paul want audience members to stay engaged and cheer them on. He says, though, that sexualizing or otherwise demeaning remarks are distracting and unwanted. Moreover, Paul stresses that you should never touch a performer without their consent. “You can’t just touch someone because they’re wearing a cool outfit,” he says. Teachey agrees that consent is necessary for all situations. He emphasizes not outing others’ identities, whether in face-to-face conversation or online. “Don’t just snap a bunch of pictures and throw them up on social media,” says Teachey. You never know which attendees are not out or exist in unsafe spaces outside of Pride, so best to err on the side of caution.

Manage Your Expectations

Pride will host a wide range of queer expression, so you may run into things that you’re not entirely comfortable with. “Don’t stare, don’t gawk,” Teachey says, specifically in regards to kink at Pride events. “It’s not your job to police things as an ally.” If you are planning on bringing your kids to Pride (and you should!), ask organizers about family-friendly sections of the parade and other events made for all ages. Even still, prepare to have conversations with your child about what Pride means and why it’s important to embrace different celebrations of it.

Be Safe

If you are attending in-person Pride events this year, follow established safety protocols, including being fully vaccinated against COVID-19 before you arrive. Safety also comes in the form of hydration and sunscreen, since you may stand under the sun for multiple hours on end. Teachey advises to take breaks needed, and maybe leave your pets at home. Ultimately, as Fuller says, by taking care of ourselves, we can go full out next year with an even bigger celebration.

Thank you to 5280 for these tips on being a good ally!

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Instant Curb Appeal: 5 Steps to Refresh Your Home’s Exterior

 
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How designer Kelly Christensen of KC Studio revamped the flat façade of her midcentury Golden home.

Talk about a time capsule. When designer Kelly Christensen of KC Studio and her family bought this ranch in Golden, it was stuck in the 1960s. “We are the second owners, and basically nothing had been updated since it was built in 1962,” she says. But a peach-colored brick façade lined with pine shrubs wasn’t exactly what her family wanted, so she tapped her friend Chris Turner of Elevate by Design to update the landscape design and select plants. Here’s how this dream team pulled the home’s exterior into the 21st century.

Before. Photo courtesy of Kelly Christensen

1. Start again: “Everything was original, and we didn’t have the budget to structurally update the front of the house,” Christensen says. The solution? Masonry-restoration company BrickImaging stained the existing brick a pale-gray hue that looks white and matches the siding on the back of the home, which is painted Benjamin Moore’s Shoreline.

2. Dream up a new doorway: A Douglas fir door with five glass panels creates an on-trend arrival moment, with the added bonus of filling the foyer with daylight. A lush array of new plantings softens the entrance: Japanese red maples, winter gem boxwoods, and carex grasses, plus Manhattan euonymus hedges in faux-concrete pots from West Elm that flank the door.

3. Welcome the neighbors: In the backyard, a new cedar fence provides privacy, except in one spot by the outdoor sitting area. “[The fence is] 6 feet high except for right there [where there’s a 4-foot-high section], so that our sweet neighbor can hang out with us,” Christensen says.’

4. Dine out: Placing a faux-concrete outdoor dining table from World Market on the patio created an instant hangout spot for all seasons. Above it, a nest-like twig chandelier from Bloom by Anuschka echoes the natural surroundings. “It’s so beautiful at night, with the perfect dim light, and in springtime little wrens try to make a nest inside of it,” Christensen says. “I’m sure they’re thinking, ‘Yes, we’ve scored!’”

5. Make a Starlight Lounge: The family discovered that the best view of the mountains could be found between two 75-year-old pine trees, so Christensen’s husband built a floating cedar deck over a small ravine to mark the spot, then stained it gray to help it blend with the surroundings. A white powder-coated sectional with cushions upholstered in tough-wearing outdoor fabric makes a cozy lounge area. “From the get-go, my husband stood down there and said, ‘This needs to be a place to get away and relax,’” Christensen says. And that’s an idea that’s always in style.

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Many Companies Want Remote Workers—Except From Colorado

 
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After a new state law that requires employers to disclose salaries for open positions, some are advertising jobs available anywhere in the U.S. but Colorado

Big companies are hiring for remote positions that can be performed in any state across the U.S. except one: Colorado.

At issue is a new Colorado law that requires companies with even a few employees in the state to disclose the expected salary or pay range for each open role they advertise, including remote positions. The rule’s aim is to narrow gender wage gaps and provide greater pay transparency for employees. To avoid having to disclose that information, though, some employers seeking remote workers nationwide are saying that those living in Colorado need not apply.

Across the internet, an array of job listings state the work can’t be done in Colorado. At Johnson & Johnson, roles recently posted for a commercial finance senior manager and a senior manager in operations include this caveat: “Work location is flexible if approved by the Company except that position may not be performed remotely from Colorado.” At commercial real-estate giant CBRE Group Inc., an ad for a project management director notes in bold: “This position may be performed remotely anywhere within the United States except the State of Colorado.”

At pharmaceutical distributor McKesson Corp. , postings for a sales specialist and a research quality manager include similar disclaimers. Job listings for a scientist, an account executive and a manager of international tax planning at rival Cardinal Health Inc. also note: “This is a remote, work from home position. This role is to be filled outside of the state of Colorado.”

Businesses have argued, in part, that Colorado’s rules are overly burdensome administratively for employers. The Rocky Mountain Association of Recruiters, a trade group, sought an injunction against the pay transparency rules earlier this year. Last month, a federal judge denied that request, allowing the rules to stand.

Keep reading.

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Here's What the Future of the American House Looks Like

 
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From dazzling entries to year-round porches, how our priorities have awakened a new era of design.

After more than a year of quarantine life at home, even The Wizard of Oz’s Dorothy might click her twinkling heels and say, “There’s no place like a cocktail bar.” The pandemic certainly shaped how we live in our respective domiciles—and did so in real time. “Any dreams that people have been sitting on have in most cases gone active. What are we waiting for?” asks Atlanta architect Bobby McAlpine. “People who have busied themselves as we all have—traveling, and going, and chasing, and using our houses as places where we pick up our dry cleaning—have shifted tremendously. And I think in many cases, people learned how to be home and how to live in their houses.”

And yet the ideal of the American home was already in flux, shifting, as it does, from one decade to the next. To examine just how much our desires and priorities have changed, we polled more than 170 architects and designers on everything from mudroom must-haves to how we host guests. The results are in. Welcome home, where the party’s just beginning.

Dazzling First Impressions

The front yard is the new social zone, says Houston designer J. Randall Powers, who is seeing a resurrection of 1960s-era block parties, with kids and parents (wine glasses in hand) coming together out front and in the street. As a result, clients are asking for street-facing landscapes to be as “knocked out” as their interior rooms, an idea for Powers that’s long overdue. “For us, an entry is like a calling card, so it should always be thoughtful and impressive,” he says. “At my own house, I want it over-the-top. I’ve got so many manicured boxwood balls, it looks like Bunny Mellon threw up in my front yard.”

In Birmingham, Alabama, architect Anna Evans is seeing a similar shift, noting that three different clients recently asked for dining rooms with French doors flanking a front terrace, specifically so their parties can spill out onto the lawn. One even requested a cooler be built into custom benches on either side of the entry. How’s that for a neighborly toast?

The Multitalented Mudroom

It’s shaping up to be the hero of modern households. Three ways the catch-all family entry is leveling up (and cleaning up) the rest of the house.

Scrub-In Station

A place to leave your shoes...and your germs? Extra showers and even laundry are moving closer to the door, notes Dallas designer Jean Liu, in a migration that proves as handy for dirty kids as front-line workers who prefer to decontaminate upon arrival.

Mini Mailroom

Liu is also retrofitting service entries with dedicated surfaces and storage for package deliveries, keeping shipped goods from cluttering entry halls and kitchens. These parcel stations can help simplify returns too, corralling everything from packing tape to labels in one place.

Digital Drop Zone

Want to really connect? Designated charging stations with built-in shelves and strategically placed outlets untether electronics from places like family rooms and kitchens, extra handy for keeping social media and blue lights out of kids’ (and our own) bedrooms.

Privacy Please

Prior to the pandemic, the walls were already closing in on the open floor plan. But there was a slice of freedom in those liberated layouts that we aren’t entirely ready to discard—and we don’t have to. Andrés Blanco of Ferguson & Shamamian Architects on three interior door styles that offer a world of versatility

“Pocket doors build in privacy and—when done right—invite a sense of wonder. In dining rooms, a beautifully detailed door might disappear into the wall to reveal a table set for a lovely dinner party.”
The jib door is, by contrast, largely invisible when closed, “the ultimate tool of the trade. When designed to be fully concealed, it is a true sleight of hand.”

“The HARMON-HINGED DOOR is technically a pocket door, as it folds back into an indentation in a paneled jamb and essentially disappears, creating a sense of openness between rooms. But, like the jib door, there’s a sense of joy in its camouflage.”

For illustrations, decor, and more, visit Veranda.

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As Featured in West + Main Home Magazine: Front Door Switch

 
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"The addition of these doors has brought us so much joy. We love coming downstairs every morning to the sunlight flooding the front entryway."

-Ashley Busch

 
 

Ashley’s entryway before and after

From the first time we visited our new home, my husband and I knew we wanted to replace the original red double front doors. The house was built in the 1980’s and was very dark in the entryway, so it really needed windows to let more light in. And, the original doors were not energy efficient at all. 

We live right along the neighborhood walking path and often catch people admiring the doors...we have received so many compliments from strangers, friends and neighbors as they pass by!

The walnut-stained oak doors were purchased from The Door Store for a total cost, including installation and keyless entry hardware, of $9,000.

Looking for some door inspo? Here are a few of our favorite styles…

 
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For more remodel inspiration, checkout the first two editions of our magazine here.

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