7 Best Shopping in Day Trips from Santa Fe, New Mexico

Centinela Traditional Arts

Fodor's choice

The Trujillo family weaving tradition, which started in northern New Mexico more than seven generations ago, is carried out in this colorful, inviting gallery. Irvin Trujillo and his wife, Lisa, are both gifted, renowned master weavers, creating Rio Grande–style tapestry blankets and rugs, many of them with natural dyes that authentically replicate early weavings. Most designs are historically based, but the Trujillos are never shy about innovating and their original works are as breathtaking as the traditional ones.

Eight Million Gods

Fodor's choice

Owned by renowned Santa Fe chocolatier Hayward Simoneaux, this bright and colorful shop specializes in folk art and carries wonderfully offbeat and eye-catching items from all over the world and at a wide range of price points. Think Spanish-colonial-style leather messenger bags, hand-painted wild boar ceramic piggy banks, Mexican paper-mâché eggs painted to look like lucha libre masks, and hand-embroidered reversible jackets from India. And yes, you'll also find some carefully curated chocolates for sale.

Gaucho Blue Gallery

This eclectic gallery carries a great mix of paintings and other pieces by local artists—notably Nick Beason's edgy monotypes and copper etchings and Lise Poulsen's felted kimonos and striking fiberworks. You'll find both contemporary and traditional works here.

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Hand Artes Gallery

For more than a half-century, this gallery attached to a rambling adobe home with sweeping mountain views has carried works by some of northern New Mexico's leading artists, including painter Alvaro Cardona-Hine, furniture-makers Larry and Nancy Buechley, and sculptor and painter Sheila Mahoney Keefe. Visitors are asked to call first to make an appointment.

Métier Studio Gallery

Set inside a handsome and historic stone building in the center of town, this superb cooperative gallery is best known for the vibrant contemporary handweaving of its several fiber artists, but you'll also find beautifully crafted ceramics, jewelry, paintings, and more.

Ortega's Weaving Shop

This shop in the center of town sells Rio Grande- and Chimayó-style textiles made by the family whose Spanish ancestors brought the craft to New Mexico in the 1600s. The Galeria Ortega, next door, sells traditional and contemporary arts and crafts in New Mexican and Native American styles.

Oviedo Carvings & Bronze

Long-acclaimed artist Marco Oviedo has earned a reputation for his sometimes whimsical, sometimes inspirational bronze carvings, which depict everything from Native figures to regional wildlife. Most of these are no more than a foot tall, and prices are quite reasonable.