Lindsborg is a city in McPherson County, Kansas, United States. As of the 2010 census, the city population was 3,458. Lindsborg is known for its association with Swedish heritage and the biennial Svensk Hyllningsfest.
Restaurants in Lindsborg
5.0 based on 30 reviews
Gallery featuring the artwork of Birger Sandzen.
Awesome exhibit of Sandzen's art career over his lifetime. It was a celebration of his 150 birthday.
5.0 based on 33 reviews
Small World is the gallery of National Geographic photographer Jim Richardson, also a keynote speaker, writer and social media commenter. It also is the custom workshop and retail showcase for IBISwoman Jewelry, designed with ancient, antique and contemporary materials from around the world. Jim Richardson has more than 30 magazine stories to his credit, with more on the way. For the National Geographic Society and clients worldwide, he speaks on issues such as feeding the world and lessons from rural places. He was named photographer of the year by his National Geographic photography colleagues in 2014. Jim Richardson also is known for his documentary photography, His work has been covered by ABC News Nightline and twice by CBS News Sunday Morning. He is on the road about half of the average year. His working office is in the gallery and he chats with gallery visitors whenever he can. IBISwoman Jewelry was founded in 2002 by Kathy Richardson, Jim's spouse. Now with Briana Zimmerling as co-designer, Kathy collects jewelry design materials that give each pair of earrings, bracelet or necklace a story that spans eras, technologies and traditions. The massive IBISwoman collection of metals, organics, stones and glass is the groundwork for all the designs seen on the gallery floor. It is open for browsing and tours, as well as work bench consultations on custom designs.
5.0 based on 26 reviews
This is the cutest store in Lindsborg. I could spend so much money in this store. The Fall selection is unique and tons of gift ideas for everyone in the family. Do visit this store while in Lindsborg. The owner Molly is so nice.
4.5 based on 42 reviews
The Old Mill is amazing enough, considering it actually runs to mill grain once a year (young children not admitted inside the mill for that, with the moving parts). See how the harvest-to-flour process worked. There is also a room with taxidermied representatives of area fauna and rock samples, with room to move around. The whole Swedish theme of Lindsborg is done with an emphasis on immigration, sample rooms of homes after they settled, and cute cut-outs to take pictures as immigrants of various ages. There is a computer with with genealogy info to look up, and songs. Then, in decent weather, there is an entire village main street across with old buildings filled with buggies and a school house, a train station, and a big Swedish pavilion that was originally built for the World's Fair in St. Louis. The whole place is heaven for active kids who soak up a lot of historical info while having room to run around and explore. The place is funky and fun, which is part of the charm. Downside would be steps most everywhere. A negligible admission charge, paid at the little gift shop. (There is a local swimming pool next door, but we've not yet combined that for a visit). Ideal for grade school children and up. There is a nice local park playground downtown for younger kids to run around and burn off energy.
4.5 based on 22 reviews
The work of Lester Raymond is on display- prepare to be amazed at how talented and prolific he was. The museum docents do a great job of guiding you through the fascinating world of a local artist, whose work should be in the Smithsonian, still that good!
4.5 based on 12 reviews
The Courtyard Gallery presents the artwork of over sixty artists with local or regional ties. Whether you are looking for a large painting or a small piece of pottery, we have options for every wallet.
4.0 based on 12 reviews
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