Local Guide · 6 min read
Where to Buy Handmade Jewelry on Vancouver Island
Vancouver Island has one of the richest maker cultures in Canada — but if you want jewelry that was genuinely made by the hands selling it, you need to know where to look. A local maker's honest guide, from Cowichan Valley market stalls to Victoria shop shelves.
Rama — maker of Rama's Beaded World, Duncan BC
I'm Rama — I make beaded earrings in Duncan, BC, with glass beads I source from the markets of Ghana, where I'm from. I sell face-to-face at markets up and down the Island every week, so this guide comes from the inside: where handmade jewelry actually gets sold here, and how to tell the real thing from the imported lookalikes.
The farmers markets: meet the maker
The single best place to buy handmade jewelry on Vancouver Island is a farmers market — because the person behind the table is almost always the person who made the work, and you can ask them anything. These are the markets where you'll find me most weeks:
- Duncan Farmers Market — Saturdays, 9am–2pm, City Square. One of the Island's biggest and longest-running markets, with a strong artisan section. This is my home market.
- Cedar Farmers Market — Sundays, just south of Nanaimo. A relaxed country market with a loyal local following.
- Ladysmith Farmers Market — Tuesdays, 3–7pm, Eagles Parking Lot. An afternoon market, easy to catch after work.
- Chemainus Wednesday Market — Wednesdays, 10am–3pm, across from Waterwheel Park, in the middle of the mural town.
The full weekly schedule, with details, lives on our Find Us In Person page.
One-of-a-kind pairs from the table: Kumasi Purple Fringe and Accra White Fringe
Victoria: maker shops open every day
If you're in Greater Victoria and can't make a market day, look for shops built around local makers. My pieces are stocked year-round at Market Collective, which curates work from Island artisans at two locations — inside the Bay Centre downtown and at Westshore Town Centre in Langford. Shops like these let you browse dozens of Island makers in one stop, any day of the week.
How to tell genuinely handmade jewelry from imports
Not everything sold at a market stall is handmade — and that matters when you're paying handmade prices. A few honest tells I'd share with any friend:
- Ask about the materials. A real maker can tell you exactly where their beads, metals or stones come from. My beads are Krobo glass — recycled glass, hand-moulded and kiln-fired in Ghana's Eastern Region. Here's the full story of how they're made.
- Look for variation. Handmade beads and hand-strung patterns are never perfectly identical. Uniformity is a factory fingerprint.
- Ask "did you make this?" — directly. Honest vendors love the question. Hesitation tells you everything.
- One-of-a-kind means one. If there are ten identical pairs on the table, it's a production run, not a piece.
Why buy handmade here rather than online?
Weight, colour, and movement — earrings live on a moving person, and no product photo can tell you how a pair catches light or how light it feels on the ear. Buying in person also keeps your money in the hands that did the work. That said, one-of-a-kind pieces sell fast at markets; everything I haven't sold in person is online at designbyrama.com, with free shipping across Canada — so if a pair catches your eye online, it's the same pair I'd have handed you across the table.
Come say hello at a market this week — or browse the collection from home.
Shop the CollectionPlanning a gift? See the handmade jewelry gift guide. New to statement beadwork? Start with how to style African beaded earrings.

