20

Sunderland market brings local makers to The Train Station

Close-up of a wooden table featuring pastries, jars of preserves, and linens at a market.

Handmade pieces, fresh bakes and a slower Saturday browse are the draw at the Art, Craft, and Graze Market in Sunderland this weekend.

The Sunderland BID event takes place at The Train Station on Saturday 13 June 2026, running from 9am to 3pm. The event listing states that no booking is required, and the entry fee field is listed as no charge. It is aimed at anyone who wants to browse local artwork, handmade crafts, gifts, home decor and artisan produce in a relaxed market setting.

Saturday market hours at The Train Station

The Art, Craft, and Graze Market is a one-day market in Sunderland, with opening times set for 9am to 3pm on 13 June.

The venue is listed as The Train Station, giving the event a central, easy-to-understand meeting point for visitors planning a morning or early afternoon stop. Sunderland BID is the organiser, and the source listing describes the market as a place to slow down, wander and meet the people behind the work.

For readers deciding whether to go, the key practical point is simple: the listing says no booking is required. That makes it a drop-in event rather than a pre-ticketed session, although visitors should still check the organiser’s event listing before setting out in case details change.

Local artwork, crafts and food stalls

The market is built around independent makers and small creative businesses rather than a single performance or workshop. Visitors are told to expect original artwork and handmade crafts, locally made gifts and home decor, plus food and drink options including fresh bakes, savoury treats and artisan produce.

The source also mentions a coffee caribe pod, making the event more suited to a relaxed browse than a quick in-and-out errand. The shape of the morning is clear: pick up a coffee, walk the stalls, talk to artists and makers, and spend time looking at work made locally.

That matters for shoppers looking for something more personal than a standard high-street purchase. Handmade gifts, home pieces and small-batch food give the market a different rhythm: people can compare materials, ask about the work and buy directly from the creative community represented on the day.

Who the Sunderland market suits

The event is pitched broadly, not only at collectors or regular craft-market visitors. Sunderland BID’s listing says it is for people who are curious, collecting, or simply looking for a relaxed morning out.

That makes it a useful option for residents who want a low-pressure Saturday plan, as well as visitors looking for locally made gifts or food. The mix of artwork, craft, bakes and savoury produce means the market can work as a short stop or a longer browse, depending on how much time people want to spend at the stalls.

There are no extra programme details in the source, and no named exhibitors are listed in the supplied event information. The confirmed appeal is the combination of local makers, handmade goods, artisan produce and the chance to speak with creatives directly.

Details to know before going

The Art, Craft, and Graze Market is scheduled for Saturday 13 June 2026 at The Train Station in Sunderland. Opening hours are 9am to 3pm.

Sunderland BID lists the event as requiring no booking. The entry fee field on the event page is shown as no charge, while the supplied event data also flags a £7.50 price signal from the wider source page, so visitors should check the live event listing before travelling if cost is a deciding factor.

The confirmed market highlights are original artwork and handmade crafts, locally made gifts and home decor, fresh bakes, savoury treats, artisan produce, and coffee from the coffee caribe pod.

Source: Sunderland BID Events

Comments

No comments yet. Be the first!
Aisha Thompson

Aisha Thompson

Aisha Thompson is a Newcastle-based editor covering events, culture and community life across Tyneside. She tracks venue announcements, transport changes, licensing updates and council decisions that affect public gatherings, checking details with organisers and official sources before publication. Her work focuses on practical, timely information that helps readers understand what is happening locally and why it matters

More Stories