Arte Nativo
You can get handmade knits and ceramics from this shop, which supports local women from the surrounding rural region.
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You can get handmade knits and ceramics from this shop, which supports local women from the surrounding rural region.
This cooperative stocks a colorful selection of handmade hammocks made from locally grown cotton. They also sell mobiles and intricate hand-painted woodwork.
This funky little Sagarnaga store carries traditional fair trade alpaca knitwear with ethnic designs.
This boutique sells pricey but high-quality knits. They also export merchandise to their shops in Holland and Belgium.
Calle Sagárnaga, near Plaza San Francisco, although tourist central, is still a good place to look for local handicrafts, Aymara embroidered shawls, and wool. Prices start at $15 USD and peak at more than $200 USD for those made of buttery-soft vicuña wool. Colorful polleras, the traditional skirts worn by indigenous women, are priced between $50 and $100 USD; bowler hats start at around $20 USD. Along the tiny streets that lead off to the right and left are numerous crafts shops.
For different, colorful, and trendy sweaters handmade from sheep and alpaca wool, try Diseños Yumi.
For the ultimate flea-market experience, visit the Feria 16 de Julio in El Alto on Thursday or Sunday. One of the largest markets in the world, here you can buy anything from a forklift truck to a Kalishnikov rifle. There's no address, it just sprawls out from the Teleférico station, block after block, seemingly endlessly into El Alto. Access is much easier now thanks to the Teleférico (red line) but get there before 9am or after 1pm to avoid long lines. Carry little with you: pickpocketing is rife.
Plaza Colón marks the start of El Prado (sometimes called Avenida Ballivián), a shop-lined avenue that stretches north to the Río Rocha.
Previously known as Casa Fisher, this shop is now owned by designer Gina McCollin and sells beautiful alpaca sweaters.
This giant local market—yet another with claims to being the biggest in Latin America—is open daily near Avenida Aroma. It's a good place to browse for less expensive crafts.
Brass and low-grade silver items can be found at the Mercado Central at Bustillos and Bolívar.
On Calle Linares, just off Calle Sagárnaga, you'll find the Mercado de las Brujas. The Witches' Market is where you'll find folk remedies and herbal treatments.
A great place to get anything from locally made soaps to recycled paper "llamita" notebooks to fine knits, this small, independent design store—aptly named Mistura ("mixture")—is packed with trendy gifts and souvenirs.