Death Café at the Library: Discuss the End
A Death Café is a place where “people, often strangers, gather to eat cake, drink tea and discuss death." And they are quite commonplace in libraries.
A Death Café is a place where “people, often strangers, gather to eat cake, drink tea and discuss death." And they are quite commonplace in libraries.
Participants learned the unique art of "flower pounding," a technique that uses a small hammer and natural pigments from flowers and leaves to create colorful, abstract designs on fabric.
The Civic Hub Initiative was a six-month pop-up designed to deepen civic engagement by spotlighting critical local issues through rotating displays and programming.
The Titanic Dinner included a 30-minute social hour with live Irish music, three classes of passengers dining together and history presentations.
A local caterer specializing in creating boards and grazing stations gave a demonstration on creating a charcuterie board. Following the lecture/demo, attendees could stay for a workshop and create their own board.
A professional food artist teaches participants how to beautifully arrange a charcuterie.
Participants learn about improv theater and engage in improv games and exercises.
This hands-on program teaches participants how to look out for disinformation through interacting with and solving a mock crime scene.
Library Director Chelsea Price struggled to get adults to programs — until "The Office" trivia night.
Welcome adults with disabilities to your library with crafting, arts and hands-on science experiments.