#Buy Native

#BuyNative is an initiative created to support Native American livelihoods and self-sufficiency by buying Native-made or Native-sold goods and services.
We encourage you to #BuyNative every day! 

See out Native offerings online and locally through artisans and vendors at powwows, museums, and via the list below.
Fashion, jewelry, beauty, high-end art – we’re positive you’ll find something to fall in love with. Check out the many names on this list and support Native Artists today! 

#BuyNative is an initiative created to support Native American livelihoods and self-sufficiency by buying Native-made
or Native-sold goods and services.We encourage you to #BuyNative every day! 

See out Native offerings online and locally through artisans and vendors at powwows, museums, and via the list below.
Fashion, jewelry, beauty, high-end art – we’re positive you’ll find something to fall in love with.

Check out the many names on this list and support Native Artists today! 

Clothing & Accessories

Ataumbi Metals — Custom-made contemporary Native American jewelry and one-of-a-kind items made by metalsmiths.

Not Above — Handcrafted, wearable creations by two ‘Asdzaan Dine’: a metalsmith and a weaver.

TP Mocs — Authentic leather moccasins. Owned and handmade by Native Americans. Made in the USA.

Urban Native Era — specializing in clothing design and content to increase the visibility of Indigenous Peoples.

BYellowtail — a Native American fashion brand and Indigenous artist collective.

Lauren Good Day — Authentic, Award Winning, Indigenous Art & Fashion.

My Paisley Pals — fan wear, athletic wear, event wear, work wear, decorative apparel, and a variety of other products as well (mugs, mousepads, pillows, blankets, car seat covers, umbrellas, etc.)

5 Sisters Beadwork — Beautiful beaded ornaments, phone grips, hair sticks, stickers, and more.

Legacy Threads — Native American modern apparel and custom regalia bags.

Beauty & Health

Cheekbone Beauty — a Canadian, Indigenous-owned beauty brand, known for Warrior Women Liquid Lipsticks. Cruelty-free!

Sister Sky — a certified Native American, women owned company. Natural solutions from Native roots.

Bison Star — quality soap, lotion, and bath salt out of Taos, New Mexico. Vegan, organic, naturally, and locally sourced ingredients.

Haipazaza — Lakota and Dakota. Committed to offering the best selection of homemade hot process soaps and other herbal good medicine plant products.

Prados Beauty — high-quality cosmetics, makeup brushes, lashes, and more.

Sequoia Soaps — Proudly Indigenous made – inspired by Native legends and ingredients.

Skwalwen Botanicals — Indigenous skincare line incorporating respectfully harvested and sourced botanicals, organic oils, nourishing plant-derived butter, and more.

Ah-Shi Beauty — Indigenous owned and operated. Cruelty-free, hypoallergenic, noncomedogenic, and paraben-free.

Food & Drink

Chef Brave Heart — an artisan, boutique catering company specializing in Indigenous foods.

Native American Tea Company — Native American Tea, Tea Gifts, and Wooden Tea Chests.

Tanka Bar — bison meat bars, a Native American healthy snack.

Dynamite Hill Farms — traditional, clean, and artisan foods.

Bedré Fine Chocolate — delicious gourmet chocolates, Meltaways, holiday gifts, and more. Oklahoma made, Chickasaw owned.

Nawapo — formerly Red Lake Nation Foods, the only American Indian tribe in the U.S. that grows and harvests their own wild rice.

Séka Hills — Specialty foods such as oils, honey, wines, and nuts from the Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation.

Ogahpah Coffee — coffee roasters and service facility owned by the Quapaw Nation.

Spirit Mountain Roasting Co. — Native-owned and operated small-batch coffee roastery.

Morning Light Kombucha — providing the highest quality Kombucha tea that nourishes their community, supports their local economy, strengthens local food systems, and allows them to give back to Native American communities.

Books, Art & Décor

Thunder Voice Hat Co — Navajo/Totonoc family-owned hat and fashion company.

Steven Paul Judd — a Native American artist who creates art that makes you laugh, makes you think, and makes you feel pride.

Birdcage Bookstore — Native American owned and operated bookstore specializing in Native American books of the Northern Plains.

Birchbark Books — a spirited collection of people who believe in the power of good writing, the beauty of handmade art, the strength of Native culture, and the importance of small and intimate bookstores.

Red Planet Books and Comics — The only Indigenous comic shop in the world!

Indigo Arrows — pillows, linens, drum stools, quilts and blankets, masks, greeting cards, and more.

Northwest Native Expressions — baskets, books, clothing, gifts, jewelry, plaques, textiles, and more.

Eighth Generation — a Seattle based art and lifestyle brand owned by the Snoqualmie Tribe featuring blankets, jewelry, apparel, and more.

Pottery by Yolanda — Variety of hand painted pottery pieces by Navajo artist.

Molina’s Lakota Beadwork — Beautiful beadwork and hand-made dolls by Lakota artist Molina Two Bulls.

Know of someone we should add to the list? Give us a call at (800) 416-8102 or email us at info@nativepartnership.org and let us know! Be sure to reference the #BuyNative page on our website. 

A quick note about Appropriation vs. Appreciation: According to the Cambridge dictionary, appropriation is “the act of taking or using things from a culture that is not your own, especially without showing that you understand or respect the culture.” 1 For example, making great personal profit from Native “inspired” designs is appropriation. Does this mean you can’t wear Native fashion or decorate your house with Native Home goods? You absolutely can, but please make sure you are purchasing from an actual Native artist — not someone who is using Native designs to make a profit. 1 https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/cultural-appropriation

Know of someone we should add to the list?
Give us a call at (800) 416-8102 or email us at
info@nativepartnership.org and let us know! Be sure to reference the #BuyNative page on our website. 

A quick note about Appropriation vs. Appreciation:
According to the Cambridge dictionary, appropriation is “the act of taking or using things from a culture that is not your own, especially without showing that you understand or respect the culture.” 1 For example, making great personal profit from Native “inspired” designs is appropriation. Does this mean you can’t wear Native fashion or decorate your house with Native Home goods? You absolutely can, but please make sure you are purchasing from an actual Native artist — not someone who is using Native designs to make a profit.

1 https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/cultural-appropriation

Contemporary indigenous fashion is who we are today as historic indigenous fashion is who my ancestors were then; it makes a beautiful visual story of indigeneity which is unique from Tribe to Tribe and person to person.” 

- Lauren Good Day