Makers Markets Galore
Sunshine Makers Market: The Very Merry Edition
December 20th, 11:00 AM–4:00 PM
Helms Design District, 8800 Venice Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90034
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The Chocolate Dispensary
1605 Grafton St, Unit 102-A, Los Angeles, 90026
December 20th, 4:00–8:00 pm
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MAUM at ROW DTLA
Saturday, December 20th, 11:00 AM–4:00 PM
ROW DTLA, 777 S Alameda St, Los Angeles, CA
Residency at OCMA, through December 31st
Call me a Luddite, but the more the machines take over, the more I cherish the hand-eye connection and the small-business entrepreneur. If you value these too, vote with your dollars at three of many makers markets in town for the holidays. These ones are all open this Saturday, December 20th, ideal for gift-giving procrastinators.
At Sunshine Makers Market at Helms Design District in Culver City, find vendors including Little Chimes, Rooted: Clay and Paper, MEIZAN, WOO World of Oils, and La Lovie, makers of ragdolls and recycled quilts, such as the Limited Holiday Edition Goose (below). Expect a seasonal soundtrack by DJ Benofficial.
Limited Holiday Edition Goose, by LA Lovie, a vendor at Sunshine Makers Market.
If you are in the Echo Park area, drop by The Chocolate Dispensary for their winter makers mart, where you can get ceramics, candles, and other stocking fillers, while sampling their mouth-watering hot chocolate.
Then there is MAUM Market at Row DTLA, a self-described, "mindfully curated" pop-up by a traveling, rotating lineup of Asian and Asian-American artists and entrepreneurs. I first experienced MAUM's beautiful ceramics, stationery, jewelry, and more at OCMA (now known as the UC Irvine Langson Orange County Museum of Art, since the recent merger). The collective is the museum's "shop partner," featuring "hyper-local, handmade, and heritage" Asian brands through December 31st, 2025.
Speaking of museum stores, read about the mindful curation at The Broad, LA Phil, and Craft Contemporary gift stores in last week's newsletter.
MAUM at UC Irvine Langson OCMA. Photo by Frances Anderton.
Light Spectaculars
Enchanted Forest of Light
Descanso Gardens, 1418 Descanso Drive, La Cañada Flintridge, CA 91011
Through January 4th, 2026
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Astra Lumina
South Coast Botanic Garden, 26300 Crenshaw Blvd., Palos Verdes Peninsula, Los Angeles, CA. 90274
Through January 31st, 2026
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Enchant Los Angeles
Santa Anita Park, 285 W Huntington Drive, Arcadia, CA 91007
Through Dec 28th
The 24/7 illumination of our region has drowned out the stars in the Los Angeles sky. But no matter, you can have them delivered right to you — digitally — at Astra Lumina at South Coast Botanic Garden. Time Out reports that the light spectacular is neither Christmassy nor wintry hour-long trail, “yet its nine stellar installations, created by Moment Factory, are the most cosmically mesmerizing of the after-dark botanical garden shows." You even get to feel stars “falling to your feet” from 20 feet above.
Image courtesy Astra Lumina.
Other fun illuminated gardens include Enchanted Forest of Light at Descanso Gardens. Its tour takes you through an eclectic combo of stained-glass cottages by Tom Fruin, geometric sculptures of HYBYCOZO (below), the Flower Power experience, illuminated Heritage Oaks (see image top of page), and much more.
Then there is Enchant Los Angeles (and Las Vegas), bringing you "The World’s Largest Christmas Light Maze," ice skating, snow slides, and all-around festive thrills to Santa Anita Park.
Image courtesy Descanso Gardens
The Shopping Cart Tree is Baaack!
California Heritage Museum
2612 Main St, Santa Monica, CA 90405
One of my longtime holiday season faves was the annual shopping cart tree designed by Anthony Schmitt in the piazza at Edgemar mall (mentioned above). Sadly, that run came to an end, but happily, the trolley tree is back, out front of the California Heritage Museum at Ocean Park and Main Street.
Schmitt, below, dressed to match his creation, says that the cart company accidentally delivered red instead of silver metal carts, enhancing the seasonal verve. Read about the 37-year history of the tree and win yourself a mini-version at a raffle Schmitt says he will hold this coming Sunday morning, December 21st, at the Farmers Market in front of the Heritage Museum.
Anthony Schmitt sits in front of his shopping cart tree. Photo by Asep Setiawan.
Corita Kent: The Sorcery of Images
Through January 24th, 2026, Tuesday through Saturday 11:00 AM–6:00 PM
Marciano Art Foundation, 4357 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90010
Use the holidays to catch up on shows you may have not yet visited — such as Corita Kent: The Sorcery of Images, at the Marciano Art Foundation, the curious private museum which closed suddenly in 2019 and reopened last year under new directorship.
It's always intriguing, however, to step inside the former Masonic temple, designed by Millard Sheets, repurposed by Kulapat Yantrasast and his firm wHY, (who recently discussed his new monograph Why WHY? with author Katya Tylevich in the foundation's library, below). Plus, one can never get enough of Corita Kent, and this show gives you a glimpse into a little-known part of her practice: photography.
Kulapat Yantrasast and Katya Tylevich discuss wHY's new book, Why WHY?. Photo by Frances Anderton.
The Sorcery of Images brings together over 1,100 images from Corita’s photographic archive in a three-screen digital slide projection (evoking Corita’s multi-screen slide show lectures). It combines images taken between 1955 and 1968 of the “urban landscape of advertising and billboards, dolls and puppets, flowers, and social events at Immaculate Heart of Mary (IHM) college, where she was then an artist, teacher, and sister, along with “many other often-overlooked moments of everyday wonder.”
Click here to book a visiting time.
Images are screened at large scale in Marciano Foundation's main space. Photo by Frances Anderton.