Brick Lane Market guide

Brick Lane Market is where Eastern promise meets East End chaos. As well as bric-a-brac and fruit and veg, you can now pick up everything from retro furniture to vintage jewellery

  • Brick Lane Market guide

    Eastern promise meets East End chaos © Ed Marshall

  • Read our full Shoreditch area guide

    The lowdown


    Brick Lane Market is growing faster than your waistline after a Bengal curry. Formerly just a trail of bric-a-brac and a smattering of fruit stalls, the now sprawling market has a buzzy new appendage every time you visit, from the fashion fare at the covered Upmarket to quirky T-shirts and jewels at the Back Yard, retro furniture at the Tea Rooms and an eclectic jumble of tat and vintage on the main thoroughfare.

    The dolling up (and dulling down) of Spitalfields worked in Brick Lane’s favour, causing the more madcap and small-scale stallholders to migrate to the surrounding streets. Now Brick Lane Market is in many ways how East End veterans recall Spitalfields in its heyday: full of surprises, a bit ramshackle, very noisy and packed to the gunnels with strange smells, sights and stalls.

    Don’t miss…
    While you’rethere, have a look at some of the quirky shops neighbouring the market.Rough Trade East on Dray Walk is arguably London’s best independent music shop and plays host to an impressive line-up of in-store gigs.

    Downside...

    Overzealous poppadom pimps poised outside curry houses; bikes sold by iffy-looking youths who hang out on Sclater Street – if it’s brand new, worth £500 and selling for £50, then it was stolen from the pub railings last night…

    Refuel at…
    Grab a handmade gastro-burger from Moos Boosh on Dray Walk – where stallholders buy their lunch – or if you fancy a drop of London beer in an authentic East End boozer, then nip down to the Pride of Spitalfields (3 Heneage St).

    Brick Lane’s top stalls


    Maria Zureta Bijoux

    This fabulous stall is a must-visit for anyone with a penchant for statement chainy jewellery. Designer Roberto Costa fashions together masses of different vintage trinkets – anything from a china clog to a bejewelled trout, and uses them to make gloriously OTT layered pendant necklaces with an antiquey feel.
    Upmarket (near back, left-hand side).

    The Tea Rooms
    This orderly, well-laid-out furniture warehouse and tea room sees the cavernous space beneath 93 Feet East transformed into a haven of reasonably priced antiques, homeware, haberdashery and ceramics. Seek out Goodnight Vienna, a stall selling immaculate Ercol tables and chairs.
    Truman Brewery.

    Vintage market
    This weekly market has a variety of well organised stalls peppered with accessories, glam fur coats and cheap men’s suits which date from the 1920s to the 1990s.
    F Block, Truman Brewery, 85 Brick Lane, E1 6QL. 11am-6pm every 
    Fri and Sat, 10am-5pm Sun

    Insider tips


    Our insider
    Thelma Speirs, East End fashion celebrity and designer/partner in Brick Lane’s Bernstock Speirs hat emporium (www.bernstockspeirs.com).

    When should you visit Brick Lane?
    ‘Every Sunday. It’s best to go as early as possible for bargains; it winds down at around 5pm.’

    Top spots
    Twentysevenpalms.com is a lovely, colourful stall in the UpMarket section of Brick Lane, selling cushions made from bright printed fabric. The carpet stall (actually more of a wall than a stall) sells carpets and rugs very cheap. It is located just off Brick Lane on Bacon Street. In the main part of Brick Lane, near the corner of Cheshire Street, there is an occasional stall selling wonderful old luggage and trunks. Also, Hunky Dory Vintage is a shop at 226 Brick Lane that is the best place to buy clothes and handbags.'

    What should you avoid?
    ‘The fur protesters who don’t appreciate my ’60s mink jacket.’

    Top tips
    ‘Combine your Brick Lane experience with a trip to Franze and Evans on Redchurch Street, an Italian café with the best coffee in town, and then drink it in the beautiful surroundings of nearby Arnold Circus. After the market, head for a stiff drink at The Nelsons Head on Horatio Street. It has lovely art on the walls and a fashionable clientele.’

    Brick Lane (plus Dray Walk), E1. UpMarket & Backyard market: The Old Truman Brewery, 91 Brick Lane, E1 6QL (7770 6028/www.sundayupmarket.co.uk). Aldgate East tube or Liverpool St tube/rail. 10am-5pm Sun.

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Comments & ratings

Rated as: 0/5 (0 ratings)
  • Parking? Saturdays you might find a space in Brick Lane itself, or on Cheshire St. Sundays the controls are fierce. Nearest free on street is just East of Vallance Rd. Beware of the Sunday morning closure of the top half of Brick Lane, which can send you back out onto Commercial Street. There is a carpark at the back of Tea Rooms/BackYard Market for £12/day, sometimes restricted if being used for yer typical East End film set. If you come, call in to us, 1st bay on right in the tearooms. Best old china in the market, amazing hand-made aprons.

    JJP Wed Mar 31 2010
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  • An Update on the Vintage Market for everyone interested. This is Now weekly, upstairs from the Sunday Up Market. The Vintage Market runs every Friday, Saturday and Sunday. you can access it from 85 Brick Lane, or the stairs inside the Up Market on a Sunday. This vintage market is really gathering pace as THE destination for vintage clothes in the area, cheaper than Rokit and Absolute Vintage, with more discerning traders, offering better quality gems. Something for everyone in this market, so go and check it out.

    ETS Thu Mar 4 2010
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  • does anyone know where the best place to park will be (preferably free-dont mind a 5 min wal)

    jtz Mon Feb 1 2010
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  • go and see the "rib man" the best ribs in london

    mrskunk67 Mon Jan 25 2010
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  • Brick Lane ! Dont forget Big Game Steaks & Burgers, was at Upmarket, Eleys Yard, now the council has stopped that market, they are now along Brick Lane at the railway bridge, Zebra Steaks, Wilderbeest, Cheval, Python, Crocodile, Kangaroo, Ostrich, Bison, Wild Boar, Etc. Etc.

    Noel Thu Nov 12 2009
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  • The council really needs to stop the sunday car traffic on Brick Lane. It's like a bunch of sat nav idiots with no clue to what's going on made it into town.

    story Mon Oct 12 2009
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  • I had a Moos boosh burger last weekend in bricklane, must amazing burger I've ever had :)

    giles Sun Oct 4 2009
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  • Without their elements of random surprises, serendipity and a bit of bazaar ramshackle, covered and open air markets aren't woth the hassle of parking or getting to. Hope Norman Foster and other clones take note?

    Jenna Sun Oct 4 2009
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