Saturday, June 20th, 2026
11 am – 4 pm
Join us for a vibrant day celebrating Indigenous creativity, artistry, and craftsmanship at the Gallery!
Explore a wide range of work by Indigenous artists and makers, including handcrafted jewelry, beadwork, cedar weaving, artwork, apparel, home goods, handmade soaps, teas, accessories, and much more!
Whether you’re looking for a special gift or something for yourself, our market offers a chance to discover and support a wide range of Indigenous creative work.
🎟️ Free Admission
GENEROUSLY SUPPORTED BY
VENDORS
646 Creations
Lyackson and Snuneymuxw First Nation
646 Creations weaves modern and traditional materials with hul’q’umi’num’ language revitalization, creating jewelry and beadwork with devil’s club and dentalium, as well as ribbon textiles.
Raven and Hummingbird Tea Co.
Squamish
Raven and Hummingbird Tea Co. creates Indigenous herbal teas and medicines. Sharing plant medicinal teachings with people from all walks of life is our passion. Cease, and Senaqwila Wyss share the business and strive to deliver the best quality handcrafted Indigenous teas, well-loved by our community for over 30 years.
Hilary Joy Rose
Secwépemc / Bonaparte First Nations
Hilary Tkachuk is a Secwépemc beadwork artist whose practice blends cultural storytelling with contemporary design. Working in small, consistent batches, she creates precise, repeatable patterns inspired by land, sky, and Secwépemc visual language. Her work reflects a commitment to cultural continuity, slow-made craftsmanship, and supporting her family through Indigenous artistry.
Spirit Chocolates
Tsleil-Waututh Nation
Mark George is a Tsleil-Waututh artist who lives on reserve and specializes in carving everything from picture frames to totem poles. He also makes fine-quality chocolates based on his carvings.
Sophie’s Cedar
Ditidaht and Ojibway
My family comes from Vancouver Island. My grandmother Sophie, who inspired me, is from Huu-ay-aht, and my grandfather is from Ditidaht. My grandmother was an artist and a weaver who mostly worked with grass and cedar. I grew up as an urbanized Indigenous person. My parents, both survivors of residential schools, chose to remove culture from our lives, but as I grew up and became a mother and grandmother myself, I taught myself to bead, weave, and sew. I use cedar bark in many of my creations and incorporate both East Coast and West Coast designs.
The Sacred Four
Nisga’a and Kwakiutl
I make sacred medicine jewelry that contains cedar, sage, sweetgrass, and tobacco. My work includes earrings, rings, pendants, bolo ties, bookmarks, and more. I also make candles, smudge sprays, rollers, and car diffusers with the medicines.
Stacy’s Creations
Kwakiutl from Wei Wai Kum Nation
I sell and make medicine jewelry that contains cedar, sage, sweetgrass, and tobacco. I also make laser-cut wood jewelry and burned hats and purses.
Sugar N Ann’s Merchandise Art
Haisla and Nisga’a
We are a daughter/mother team from the Nisga’a, Haisla, and Tsimshian Nations. We sell Sugar Nisyok’s artwork on clothing, including jean jackets in adult and children’s sizes, men’s vests, hats, T-shirts, and sweaters. Ann makes cedar hats, both traditional and fedora styles, as well as cedar roses and earrings.
Haisla Dream Creations
Haisla
I am a Haisla Nation artist of the Killer Whale Clan and founder of Haisla Dream Creations. I specialize in contemporary West Coast formline design, offering apparel, hats, laser-engraved items, beadwork, earrings, and accessories. My work blends traditional influences with modern style to create distinctive, high-quality pieces that celebrate Indigenous culture.
BC Button and Beads
Nisga’a
I am Nisga’a and Kwakiutl from Gitlaxt’aamiks, residing in Langley, BC. I utilize sweetgrass in cabochon earrings and sweetgrass hoop earrings. I also create various styles of dentalium jewelry featuring abalone, mother of pearl, and freshwater pearls.
Sasquatch Island
Kwakwaka’wakw / Cree
Thomas Sewid is a Kwakwaka’wakw/Cree artist who carves wood pieces and paints. My specialty is painting on plywood, including Dzoonakwa/Sasquatch and orca whales, using alcohol dyes to capture the grain pattern. I am also well known for the wood lathe-turned bowls that were willed to me by the late master woodturner Bill Luce. I paint a diverse array of Kwakwaka’wakw animals, whales, and fish on these wood works of art. My Dzoonakwa/Sasquatch bowls are highly sought after. Recently, I have opened the work of my Cannibal Society of Hamatsa by creating bowls with spiritual entities from our spiritual realm.
Sus Cho
Nadleh Whut’en Dakelh
Sus Cho, also known as Randall Bear Barnetson, is a transgender, Two-Spirit, multidisciplinary Northwest Coast Indigenous artist. Sus Cho is a member of the community of Nadleh Whut’en, the Dakelh Nation, and the Duntem’yoo Bear Clan. Their artistic practice interprets matters of mental health and wellbeing, identity, culture, and spirituality through the framework of Northwest Coast Indigenous art forms. Their work includes digital art prints, original hand-painted canvases, and jewelry.
Raven’s Beads
Haida
I am from the Haida Nation and am a self-taught beader. I also craft with other mediums, including cedar and yarn. I hand-bead jewelry such as earrings, pendants, pins, and bracelets.
Bush ‘Bougie
Mother, grandmother, aunty, granty, and six-year residential school survivor. My cultural skills include fishing, hunting, harvesting, medicine gathering, and harvesting bark for cedar weaving, regalia, baskets, and jewelry. I believe, “Culture is healing, and healing is culture.” My passion is working with the elements of and from the Lax Yip — territory and land — for healing, wellness, and balance. My work includes jewelry made from cedar bark and wo’umps, also known as devil’s club, healing salves, cedar hats, mats, wearables from traditional to contemporary, and cedar weaving.
Bella Cree Beads
Bella Cree Beads is a local beadwork artist creating West Coast and Cree-style pieces of wearable art. The main focus is on hats, jewelry, and regalia pieces.
Potlatch Woman
I am a cedar weaver, and I sell cedar jewelry and accessories.
Lisa Beading
Lisa Walker is an Indigenous — x̄á’isla Nation and British artist from Kitimat, BC, currently based in Metro Vancouver. She earned her BFA from Emily Carr University in 2008, with a major in photography. She currently works full-time as a beadwork artist, creating mainly one-of-a-kind fringe beaded earrings. She began her small business, @lisa.beading, in 2019.
Lisa uses tiny glass seed beads and hand-stitches each one together to create beautiful wearable art. She explores traditional and contemporary themes, from pop culture to West Coast design. In journalistic personal narratives, Lisa shares her feelings of being an outsider, processing intergenerational trauma, and finding joy and humour in the world. She loves to work in bold, bright colours, inspired by everything from NASA galaxy imagery to ’90s children’s toys. Her work is about resilience, joy, and genuine human experiences.
Secwépemc Sisters’ Sacred Thread
We are two Indigenous, queer, and disabled artists who create medicine jewelry, hair accessories, bookmarks, ribbon skirts, shirts, and baby clothes. We also make our own stickers and prints.
Haisla M. Collins
Haisla Collins is a local artist creating contemporary Northwest Coast art. She is connected to the Tsimshian, Nisga’a, and Gitxsan Nations and is most well known for *Sisters, Daughters, Clan Mothers* at the Vancouver Public Library, her restoration of Roy Henry Vickers’ salmon sculpture at the Vancouver Aquarium, and the Richard Shorty Memorial Mural. She sells art prints, originals, beaded earrings, cards, and more.
Sea Nailed It
Seaira is a hand-painted artist specializing in hand-painted press-on nails, often creating other hand-painted pieces such as purses, shoes, and canvases. She also sells handmade scrunchies and handmade cuticle oil, as well as handmade silk roses made by her sister and colouring books designed by her brother.
Cheryl’s Trading Post
Cheryl’s Trading Post is an Indigenous-owned business representing Northwest Coast artists, including Gitxsan, Haida, and Coast Salish artists. I am Gitxsan from Gitanmaax, and this work is grounded in lived experience and long-standing relationships with artists. We work directly with artists, purchasing and carrying their work to support consistent income and professional presentation.
Our collection includes hand-carved silver and gold jewelry, Northwest Coast design pieces, beadwork, Cowichan knitwear, selected wool blankets, and works by recognized Northwest Coast artists, with clear attribution to each artist and Nation. We focus on authentic work presented at a standard suitable for collectors, institutions, and public audiences.
Cedar Hot Sauce
Indigenize your palate with Cedar Hot Sauce. Proudly Indigenous, small-batch sauces showcasing plant medicines from Turtle Island. Bringing spice to the next level without leaving flavour behind. Always made in house on xʷməθkʷəy̓əm, Sḵwx̱wú7mesh, and səlilwətaɬ territories.
Thelildragonstudio
Thelildragonstudio is run by Indigenous Canadian artist Jessey Tustin, selling a collection of handmade wares, including scrunchies and tote bags made from reclaimed fabric to help prevent textile waste from reaching landfills. Jessey also creates edge-beaded seal fur earrings, edge-beaded frame earrings in various shapes and sizes, zines, prints, stickers of original illustrations and fan-favourite characters, and much more as they explore different mediums and expand their skills.
Products include edge-beaded seal fur earrings, edge-beaded frame earrings, scrunchies, tote bags, stickers, prints, lino prints, bookmarks, colouring pages, and bag charms.
Kimoowun Beads
Shawn Bourks is the artist behind Kimoowun Beads, creating contemporary Métis beadwork and fur tufting from her home in East Vancouver. A Two-Spirit Michif artist, Shawn’s work is a direct connection to her ancestors and a celebration of Indigenous resilience. Using traditional materials like caribou fur, smoked moose hide, porcupine quills, and dentalium, she creates unique, slow-made jewelry and accessories. Everything is made with love and care, so her pieces are good medicine to those who wear them. Pieces Shawn sells include beaded earrings, necklaces, bolo ties, bag charms, bags, hats, and more.
Shining Bear Designs
I create wearable teachings on new and gently used apparel. Based on Indigenous teachings, I design and produce my pieces myself. My work includes crewnecks, hoodies, T-shirts, jackets, dresses, and more.
Sweetgrass Soap
Sweetgrass Soap is an Indigenous woman-owned and operated small business based in Chilliwack, BC. Our products include Indigenous handmade soap, body butters, lip balms, and smudge sprays. Our products have been featured in magazines such as *Chatelaine Magazine*, *Fashion Magazine*, and *BC Business Magazine*, as well as on *Acting Good* Seasons 2 and 3.
Berrylicious Beading
Berrylicious Beading creates beaded earrings, lanyards, and bolo ties.
Honeybae Beads
Honeybae Beads creates hand-beaded jewelry rooted in cultural artistry and intentional design. Each piece is created slowly and thoughtfully, honouring traditional techniques while bringing a modern, expressive edge to everyday adornment.
Kwulasultun
Eliot White-Hill, Kwulasultun, he/they, is an artist and storyteller from the Snuneymuxw First Nation in Nanaimo, BC. His family roots are in Penelakut and Hupacasath in the Nuu-chah-nulth world. His interdisciplinary art practice is rooted in honouring and celebrating the stories and teachings passed down by his ancestors and culture.
He works across a range of mediums, including digital art, printmaking, painting, sculpture, installation, creative writing, and curation. He sees all of his practice as an extension of his storytelling and works to share what he finds beautiful and profound about the Coast Salish worldview. He currently resides on the territories of the Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh peoples.
Marisa Crafts Things
Marisa Law, Marisa Crafts Things, is a multi-talented Indigenous youth artist and facilitator based in Vancouver, BC. She explores art with no borders, intertwining the beauty of nature with reflections of her culture. Her mediums include, but are not limited to, handmade Indigenous beaded jewelry and accessories, leatherwork, lino prints, stickers, silk-screened clothing and accessories, painting, and weaving.

