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ADX

Housed in a 14,000-square-foot warehouse in southeast Portland, ADX is one of the city’s most pioneering concepts. Read Indagare's review.
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Ballard Sunday Market

Stretching for two blocks along Ballard Avenue N.W. in the delightfully picturesque heart of the old Ballard neighborhood, this year-round Sunday market is a destination for locals and market-lovers throughout the city. The stalls sell fresh produce, much of it organic, cheeses, meats, fish, bread and baked goods, wine, and artisan crafts. There are also ethnic food stalls. Many of Ballard’s most delightful shops are open as well.

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Beam & Anchor

Beam & Anchor stocks a curated selection of Portland-made products. Read Indagare's review.
Editors' Picks
boutique with one gold wall and light wooden display stands

Betsy & Iya

Betsy & Iya has been making jewelry in house since 2008, and some of their bestsellers are cuff bracelets of all the bridges in Portland and beyond, like the Golden Gate Bridge. The store also carries work by local artists and crafts custom pieces, and there is a small selection of curated clothing and housewares. The vibe is cool and modern meets bohemian, and the store is extremely eco-conscious and anti-fast fashion, employing sustainable and ethical practices as well as generous work conditions for all employees.

Cacao

A temple to chocolate, Cacao has several locations in Portland and is known for its curated selection of high-quality, small batch chocolates.
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Elliott Bay Book Company

After decades in Pioneer Square, Seattle’s pre-eminent bookstore moved to a new location on Capitol Hill. This busy bookstore is firmly embedded in the consciousness of every Seattleite who buys books, and it hosts visiting authors and literary events throughout the week.

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Fran’s Chocolates

Seattle native Fran Bigelow fell in love with chocolates decades ago when her husband took her to her first patisserie in Paris. When she returned to Seattle, she began making the chocolates and particularly the salted caramels that have now made her name. Even President Obama has commented on them. Only the finest and highest-grade ingredients, local whenever possible, are used, with chocolate made exclusively for Fran’s by Valrhona.

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Frances May

The most fashion-forward clothing boutique in Portland, Frances May is located in a soaring space in downtown Portland.

Merchandise at Hitchcock, Seattle, Pacific Northwest

Hitchcock

This somewhat unassuming boutique in the Madrona neighborhood sells exquisitely crafted jewelry handmade by 15 different artists, half of whom are local to Seattle. The shop carries a mixture of fine and fashion jewelry, including Hitchcock’s signature druze rings set with dramatic druze quartz crystals with sparkling interiors, each one unique. Though the jewelry sold here is all new, some pieces have a filigreed and finely detailed vintage aesthetic to them. Hitchcock also carries scarves for every season, bags, and handmade hats. If you want a hit of high-end, handmade Seattle artistry, check this place out.

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Kiriko Made

Kiriko Made sells one-of-a-kind kimonos and jeans made with salvaged denim and lined with patterned Japanese fabric.
Editors' Picks
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Lucca Great Finds

This wonderfully browsable gift shop on Ballard Avenue specializes in exclusive European toiletries, including Santa Maria Novella soaps, handmade jewelry and cards, and high-end paper products. But those choice items merely anchor the store’s other great finds, which come from everywhere and include surprises of all kinds and at all price points.

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Maak Lab

Maak Lab sells soy-based candles and soaps that are made with natural, sustainable ingredients. Read Indagare's review.
Editors' Picks
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MadeHere PDX

A one-stop shop for souvenirs, MadeHere occupies a warehouse-style space and sells only Portland-made products.
Editors' Picks
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Orox Leather

Orox sells bags, belts and small leather goods (wine caddies, dog collars) out of its workshop in Portland’s Chinatown.
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Paxton Gate

Stuffed to the gills with such curiosities as carnivorous plants, taxidermy and framed insects, Paxton Gate is a treasure trove of unusual items.
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Peter Miller Books

Anyone interested in architecture and design books and supplies will want to visit this long-established and always-enticing bookstore in downtown Seattle. The selection of international titles on all aspects of world architecture and design can keep you browsing for hours, and the choice selection of beautifully designed objects for home, office and personal use is always tantalizing.

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Pike Place Market

Seattle’s number one tourist attraction is a world unto itself—a big, sprawling farmer’s market overlooking Elliott Bay and the waterfront where you’ll find market stalls selling gorgeous produce and fish, handmade crafts, specialty foods and spices, baked goods, tourist trinkets, and everything in between. There are a couple of venerable restaurants, like Lowell’s, where you can get a good basic meal, including breakfast. The fun here is simply to wander up and down the ramps and stairways and poke around in the market’s different levels. It’s usually jammed by 10 a.m. and pretty much closes down by 6 p.m. Some of the vendors have become performers, like the fishmongers who draw crowds by tossing huge salmon back and forth, but the market is still used by Seattleites looking for top-quality comestibles. There’s nothing upscale or high-end about Pike Place Market, except for the quality of its fish and produce—it’s as close as an American city can come to having a bazaar. It also happens to be the oldest such public market in the country, having opened in 1907.

Editors' Picks
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Portland Saturday Market

In operation since 1974, the Portland Saturday Market is the biggest continuously operated outdoor market in the United States. Read more.
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Powell’s City of Books

The largest independent bookstore in the world, Powell’s occupies an entire block in Portland’s city center and rises four stories.
Editors' Picks
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Quin Candy

Quin Candy is located in Union Way, a tiny shopping arcade in downtown Portland, where it sells artisan candies in surprising flavors.
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Schoolhouse Electric & Supply Co.

This lighting and housewares store sells unique pieces like analog clocks and early-20th-century antiques, as well as office furniture and bath accessories.
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Smith Teamaker

The fragrant shop, which often smells of peppermint or chai, serves tea lattes and sells packaged Smith teas.
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Snow Peak

Snow Peak stocks tents, cookware including Portland-made Finex skillets and apparel for men and women.
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Tender Loving Empire

Adored by locals and Portlandia star Carrie Brownstein, who called it a “dream boutique,” Tender Loving Empire is both a record label and a store.
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The Good Mod

The Good Mod occupies a sprawling 20,000-square-foot warehouse where its team of craftspeople restores mid-century modern and Danish furnishings.
Interior View -  Totokaelo, Seattle, Pacific Northwest

Totokaelo

If you want to see the hippest of high-end, up-to-the-nanosecond Seattle fashion for men and women, head up to this spacious lifestyle store on Capital Hill between Pike and Prince Street. The décor is minimalist, as in a gallery, and that’s basically what Totokaelo is: a gallery for fashion and home decor, where every piece is hand-selected. You’ll find exclusive lines of Yosi Yamamoto, Rich Owens, APC, Mangella, Acne, and Jil Sanders, among others, and shoes from designers around the world. The store, which opened in 1993, also carries a few choice table linens, tableware, and home furnishings, but it’s mostly about the clothes.

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Union Way

This small shopping arcade spans the block between Powell’s and the Ace Hotel, and is home to a handful of wonderful stores.

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