Oaxaca Shopping

  1. Artesanías Cocijo

    A particularly good selection of masks.

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  2. Casa de las Artesanías de Oaxaca

    This store sells the work of 80 family workshops and craft organizations from around Oaxaca state. Its patio is surrounded by several rooms full of rugs, ceramics, tinware, alebrijes and other crafts.

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  3. Central de Abastos

    The enormous main market is a hive of activity every day, with Saturday the biggest day. If you look long enough, you can find almost anything here. Each type of product has a section to itself, and you can easily get lost in the profusion of household goods, CDs and artesanías and the overwhelming quantities of fruit, vegetables, sugarcane, maize and other produce that's grown from the coast to the mountaintops.

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  4. Étnico

    Has a very attractive line in patchwork bedspreads and cushions made from pieces of huipil . There's another branch at Allende 113.

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  5. Hecmafer

    Assorted very high-quality goods.

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  6. La Mano Mágica

    You'll find some wonderfully original and sophisticated craft products at this shop and gallery, including work by one of its owners, the masterly Teotitlán del Valle weaver Arnulfo Mendoza. Some Mendoza pieces go for tens of thousands of dollars, and when you see them you'll understand why.

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  7. Mercado de Artesanías

    This indoor crafts market is strong on alebrijes, stamped tin ware, embroidered textiles and tablecloths. As you walk through you're likely to see some of the vendors passing the time by plying their crafts, such as weaving or embroidering.

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  8. Mercado Juárez

    This indoor market, a block southwest of the Zócalo, sells a diverse mixture of food, flowers, clothes, hats, sandals and leather belts and bags. Women hawk mounds of grasshoppers on the street outside the Flores Magón entrance.

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  9. Oro de Monte Albán

    This firm's metalsmiths craft beautifully worked jewelry in gold, silver and semiprecious stones, including copies of pre-Hispanic jewelry and pieces inspired by colonial-era designs. The interesting free workshop tour (in Spanish) at the Gurrión branch includes a demonstration of the pre-Hispanic lost-wax casting technique. Other branches are along Alcalá.

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