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The Make(Her) No. 5: Marité Acosta, Potter & Chef

Jacqueline Smith July 31, 2019

WE ARE SUPPORTED WITH GOODS MADE BY OVER FIFTY WOMEN, AND TO BETTER UNDERSTAND WHO THEY ARE, WE’RE SPOTLIGHTING ONE ARTIST MONTHLY-ISH TO LEARN WHAT’S MADE HER, THE MAKER. 



by Jacqueline Smith, Founder & CEO, FOUND Natural Goods

The fresh (and delicious) scones served in her bowl during our Make(Her) Q&A Conversation.

Marité’s infamous style textured handmade pottery. Photo by Matité Acosta

FOUND’s fifth spotlight of the Make(Her) Series lands on Marité Acosta pronounced MAR-a-TAE, Potter & Chef. Marité and I met earlier this summer at her new gallery and workspace in Tumalo, Oregon, called The Studio: Pottery + Arts Collective. Set inside a red barn exterior, the neutral almost industrial styled interior quickly sets her apart from the neighbors, hinting at her many talents and hats she’s both worn and mastered whilst in New York City. 

Draped in natural linens herself, Marité instantly jumps up to greet me offering fresh scones, water, coffee, and volunteers details lost in textile art today, inspired by my vintage jumper with monochromatic florals. Her wisdom comes from once being a fashion designer, colorist and food stylist –– all of which are not unrelated to her present professional roles as a Chef and as we all know, a Potter.

Marité Acosta’s absolutely drool-worthy pottery can be found inside only a select few shops which thankfully includes FOUND Natural Goods and even our online store is now carrying her coveted tiny ceramic dishes in a plethora of custom finishes, all made by hand, by Marité herself here in Central Oregon. Please enjoy the edited transcription below from our hour plus together. 


Marité Acosta (MA): Oh, that’s great.  

Jacqueline Smith (JS): Isn’t it? My Aunt Carol found this vintage piece in Portland. 

MA: Yeah, and that’s clearly a vintage print. When I was a Fashion Designer, I saw so many prints and this is from a really, really long time ago when they did these, almost like French prints where it was first etched that then gets printed. Nobody does that anymore. If you ever see this, it's because it's been taken from a vintage print. The detail is so crazy. 

JS: It’s really beautiful. How do you know so much about so many things? I thought I came here to talk pottery. 

MA: Well, I do use fabrics in pottery—which, it's funny because it seems so obvious coming from fashion. But, when I was first making pieces and using textiles for texture [on pottery] it really wasn't so obvious to me. I just liked it. And then someone said it to me, “Oh, so your textile background influences…” I was like, oh yeah, I guess so!

JS: You said you’ve been here only about a week?

MA: We've been here a few months now. But in terms of being able to come in and do work––it’s only been about a week, yes. [walking around the studio] We've got the kiln here. I actually had that in my garage for a while while I was trying to figure out my studio worlds. Trying to find something other than the school (COCC), which is such a great school. Thank God the school was there! But I wanted my own space and I was lucky that Heidi (Weiss-Hoffman) and I met on the first day of class and then we just connected and in the back of our minds thought we would get a space together one day and I'm so bloody happy now. 

JS: It feels good in here. It's great, it's crisp. 

MA: Right? Good energies. Cool. High ceilings. 

JS: Raw and beautiful. 

Inside The Studio: Pottery + Arts Collective. Photo by Matité Acosta

MA: Yeah. It's funny because my first formal title in a job as a designer was ‘colorist’. And so everything revolved around color and having to use it, but I tend to go towards neutrals. I used to go to factories and approve colors for huge corporations, for menswear, womenswear, and kids, all fabrics, all fibers. But in my personal life, I need void of color. I like clean simplicity. I know when I go into someone's home where there's lots of colors I'm always very impressed because it’s so bold. 

JS: Yes, it's a commitment. 

MA: Anything is a commitment. I mean whatever your choice, you're committing to it. But when it's louder, I'm like wow, that's so amazing!  Even this space, Heidi and I both agreed to keep it neutral because color always finds its way in one way or the other –– whether it's the blue cup there, or you know, just on a piece [of pottery]. But in this clean space, I can sit in quiet for hours and just make. Especially with pottery, it’s pure meditation. 

JS: Hmmm. 

MA: Even in a group studio, I was always with headphones on and just go for hours without talking to anybody. And in New York, I sought that out because there’s just so much noise. I’d been in New York City since I was 20––actually, since I was 18 I'd lived in cities, big cities. And now here, I'm so embracing being able to sit here quietly and have that [Marité points to the trees outside and we can both hear the birds chirping]. It's so peaceful. It's like shocking. I could sit down and watch the hummingbirds in our garden, for hours. It's such a nice place. It's a nice shift in our life living here. 

JS: Sounds wonderful. And what’s this rolling contraption? 

MA: That’s a slab roller. What I was doing before that was hand throwing and flattening, tossing down by hand.  This is a quicker, more efficient way. Here, right now I'm playing with this really sandy, like it just kind of crumbles, you can mess with it. [Marité hands Jacqueline a ball of wet, grey clay]

JS: Where is it from? 

MA: This from Georgie's in Portland. I've been playing with sourcing clay from a lot of different places since I moved here, just trying to sort of seeing what I like. And so it's been an ongoing year, almost two-year experiment. 

JS: Oh, it’s really sandy. 

MA: Right, so it dries out fast, and you've got to work with it very quickly. Plus we're in a dry environment, but each clay is different. I mean, I'm definitely finding some a bit too dry, but I think I'm narrowing it down now. But I mostly use this –– very similar to what you have inside FOUND. This allows these details to come out. [Marité points to the imperfections and discolorations in color on a finished piece of pottery]

The “freckles” on a white Ikebana we know and adore at FOUND.

JS: The freckles? 

MA: Yes, on certain glazes the iron in the clay raise and pop through as freckles. I like these more muted colors here. 

JS: So from my inexperienced perspective… taking the glaze out of the equation, this is obviously a different clay from this one, right? 

MA: But you've done some work, yeah? 

JS: Well, yeah, but it's been years and years –– actually the last time I threw on a wheel was about three years ago in Japan. I was staying at an Airbnb and had commented on the pottery they had stocked their kitchen with, for us to use, and the woman grabbed my hand and led me to her studio down the gravel road where she basically giggled and covered her mouth for a good hour while I made bowl after bowl. She was actually pretty impressed by my last bowl. 

MA: That’s amazing. 

JS: It was a little surreal. But, not to digress too much, I'm really curious about the different clays––can you source them back to where the clays are from on the earth? 

MA: I probably could if I researched it and called the maker and asked. 

JS: Clay Makers? 

MA: Yeah. 

JS: I love that that’s a job.  

MA: The clay that I used back east, it doesn't make sense for me to have it shipped here. It's so heavy. So I'm trying to source something here that is similar and so far they’re pretty close. The clay right there is what's called green. So greenware is the most fragile state actually. It’s just dry clay and it will crumble. And there are so many times throughout the process of pottery where things can go awry. So to me, it's hugely successful to end up in a place where I'm like, oh yeah, I like that. I'm happy where this ended up. 

JS: It’s such a process. 

Top to bottom, this photo illustrates the same clay as wet, greenware, and after the first firing before glaze.

MA: When I first started doing pottery I took a class and then I took another class and another. I was spending as much time in the studio as I could. I started turning down jobs. I freelanced so I could take the jobs when I wanted them. [Marité and Jacqueline look over a shelf of her incomplete and finished work] I’ve always been less excited about a perfectly thrown bowl. However, I can really appreciate how the skill that goes into it. It’s less exciting, but it's a beautiful thing. And I can't even throw the perfect bowl––I don't tend to sit and do 10, 12 of somethings. I don't have the attention span. I prefer to visualize the bigger picture. 

JS: What’s your bigger picture?  

MA: It's more of the lifestyle, the general aesthetic. I guess it starts with my own aesthetic which  tends to be more, you know, natural, and organic I guess?

JS: Full of beautiful details like your linen apron and the brass rivets? 

MA: But not intentional. It just works because you know, like your store, you follow what feels right to you. You're not thinking about every available decision as it relates to every other decision. You just make your decisions, they pile up and ultimately it's you on a plate.

JS: Literally, you on a plate. [laughs]

MA: Literally, yeah. [laughs] And then so I started doing that when I was at Food Network and I was working on food styling and we had some people in from California ––a photographer and stylist–– and of course they collect pottery and they asked to see my work and they bought everything. I was like, Oh! I have to start making more. 

JS: No way! 

MA: So that's just how that started. And I love to sell pottery because I just know that it's somewhere being used and loved. I used to sell a lot of it online and then people started collecting and then there was shipping international –– shipping sucks. Shipping pottery specifically. I just shipped the three things this week and fingers crossed.  You're just afraid it's going to break so I pack the life out of it. I've shipped all over the world and it's tricky, but so flattering especially with so many good potters in the world. You know, there are so many good people out there. I shipped to Australia once with no way of tracking it. I was having a heart attack. I kept asking, why my work? There are so many amazing Australian potters - what a compliment! 

JS: I mean, they must have heard what you were saying? 

MA: I guess it spoke to them. I mean it's kind of the ultimate compliment. You know that someone likes what you're making. Yeah. It really makes me happy. It's the one thing in my career that I've designed that I didn't have to design into. The crucial part of the process in clay is letting go of certain amount of control, which was, for me is one of the most wonderful parts of it,  just accepting that things happen along the way and most of the time when it comes out different than what I expected, those are the best details. 

JS: Happy accidents. 

Bowl stacks photo by Matité Acosta

MA: Yes, I think the most exciting part of it is not trying to overly control every step of it because again, ultimately it will be me. It doesn't matter as long as it's me making it, you know, even if that was thrown, to me that lives in the same house or life. Just like your store, everything lives together in harmony because you've decided and so it works. People either get it or they don't. 

JS: It's fun to show people that you don't have to have new or it doesn't have to be perfect. Like you're saying, the perfectly thrown bowl. It can be this really interesting shape that has movement and imperfections, or it's old or used or rusted.  

MA: Or cracked or chipped even! Even a chipped bowl is okay. I mean it's all right. It still works. If it’s a good break, you know, do a little kintsugi. It’s become so trendy. It's beautiful, but it's become trendy. It's funny to see like some manufactured things that they call kintsugi and they just… 

JS: Oh, that’s sad. 

MA: Anyone who knows what it is, knows the difference between legit and inauthentic kintsugi. Some of mine aren’t true true kintsugi. Sometimes the gold is just decorative too.

JS: One of my favorite things about terracotta pots is that they get moldy, and they start to grow funky moss––really wild black and white splotches. And, last summer when I was opening FOUND one of my few products were authentic patina terracotta pots that I just adore––they’re fragile and from Italy originally. I went shopping at Target randomly, and there were fake molded terracotta pots for sale!  

MA: Cheaters! 

JS: I was so sad I was almost mad. I wanted to tell them they couldn’t do it.

MA: [laughs]

JS: So, how were you patient enough to find your art in all these different creative careers? 

MA: My dad was a doctor, and he was a meticulous guy who made wine when I was a kid and we always had bonsai gardens, and he was also a very accomplished painter.  So, I think that kind of creative exposure early on definitely had an influence. That's what you do––you learn from anything and everything. I think you learn how to do something, do it right, and then you could apply it to anything. I think that in pottery, it's all very much subjective, but if you do a technical bowl and you slice it right down the middle and you can see that it was a very well-made bowl, that’s great. It's a good skill to have, but, outside of that, the rest is the details. 

JS: Is it important for you to communicate the different types of glazes or for them to know the names or who? 

MA: No, not necessarily because it’s likely something I’ve mixed. The only specific that I feel people should know is that the glaze itself is food safe and that when something is a matte finish, um, it can stain. Matte-finished stuff can absorb because it's porous to some degree, but doesn't make it unsafe for food. I don’t love shiny glazes. Sometimes.

JS: These you called test tiles? [Jacqueline points to a set of test tiles on the shelf]

MA: Yes, But, well, anything can be a test tile. Actually, I do a lot of my testing on the little bowls so I don't typically use a lot of those. And truth be told, I'm really lazy about testing glazes. 

JS: Or maybe you're just mysterious chemist? 

Photos from Marité’s pottery inside FOUND Natural Goods downtown Bend, Oregon.

MA: No, I'm a very bad chemist. [laughs] I won't go through a lot of testing. So if I do test, sometimes I'll test on a little bowl and I'm like, okay, that's good. I don't get so retentive about pottery. If it turns out that it's not nice, I just move on. 

JS: That's kind of lovely though. 

MS: It’s because I needed to be so kind of meticulous in so many other things. Like even at Food Network when I was doing recipe testing, we would test a recipe four times over and over with detailed notes before you publish. You had to be so meticulous and very, very clear and I loved it. It was great. It was a great place, great environment to be in. But, but with pottery, I don't need to do that, which is why I don't do production. That's a whole another type of business.

JS: Do you do custom, I know you've talked about having a custom order. 

MA: Yeah, I will, but I always have a very specific stipulate. Like plates. Plates are the hardest thing to make. It’s why you'll probably see more bowls in handmade pottery than plates - plates warp. So to do a flat plate, flat bottom, by hand [meaning via slab technique rather than on a wheel] is difficult. And even on a wheel, those are very hard. But plates can wobble. And so again, when I do a bunch of plates, I embrace the fact that they're not going to be a perfectly flat plate. But if I pick it up and then lay down and let it continue to dry, it'll dry curved like this now because the clay has memory. 

JS: What about the clay? I know you work with a couple of different types of stoneware. Do you have any interest in working with other materials like porcelain? 

MA: I like stoneware and what I like to do with stoneware, that I think may be a little different, is I tend to try and push stoneware to it’s thinnest. I've lost a ton of work because of this. You have to employ a lot of patience with clay and know it can go wrong. If something breaks it’s devastating and then after a few minutes you're like, well you better get used to that because it’s going to happen.  


Marité Acosta’s pottery is available on her website and inside FOUND Natural Goods downtown Bend, Oregon. Follow Marité on Instagram, @mariteacostapottery and @ingredientstudio to witness her obvious past career in food styling —and— the next time you’re driving through Tumalo, stop by and say hi to Marité. Meet her, see her work, The Studio and maybe even book a private cooking class with her and her partner, Candy through their cooking business Ingredient Studio. Thank you for reading another FOUND Make(Her) Q&A Conversation — we truly appreciate your interest and support.

Signage for The Studio is, of course, printed on a beautiful fabric and still allows lights to fill the space.

Marité making the final details on a bowl inside her new workspace in Tumalo, Oregon called The Studio: Pottery + Arts Collective.

The Studio: Pottery + Arts Collective

19875 8th St. 

Tumalo, OR

Read the rest of our Make(Her) Blog Series

  • Make(Her) No. 6: Carol Arnott, Picker & Stylist

  • Make(Her) No. 5: Marité Acosta, Potter & Chef

  • Make(Her) No. 4: Paige Bruguier, Accessory Designer

  • Make(Her) No. 3: Tanya Hughes, Plant Devotee

  • Make(Her) No. 2: Morgan Miller, Painter & Midwife

  • Make(Her) No. 1: Emily Gibbons, Jewelry Designer

In founder musings, eco home goods, lifestyle Tags makeher, maker, bend oregon maker community, oregon artist, oregon artist interview, oregon potter, oregon pottery, marite acosta, marite potter, marite pottery, marite acosta pottery classes
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Photo by Jessica Heigh

Photo by Jessica Heigh

The Make(Her) No. 1: Emily Gibbons, Jewelry Designer

Jacqueline Smith January 26, 2019

At Found, we are supported with handmade inventory by over fifty people every month. So to better understand who these people are, we’re spotlighting one artist each month. We want to know what’s behind the art, the artist, the designs and mainly, the woman. As 98% of our Found makers are women, we’re shining a light on what’s made her in a new blog series.


First up, Emily Gibbons (EG) ––jewelry designer, painter, mom, and generally driven woman–– was interviewed by Found Natural Goods Founder, Jacqueline Smith (JS) for over an hour with coffee in hand under the unusually warm winter sunshine at Looney Bean's riverfront garden next door to our brick-and-mortar on Brooks Street downtown Bend, Oregon. 

JS: I’m choosing you first [Emily] because you’re my friend and I’m not totally clear on my questions.

EG: [laughs] Well, I’ll try my best!

JS: Ok, so was there a moment when you knew you wanted to make jewelry?

EG: Yeah. I had just finished school, and I was a painting major in college and I was really dedicated to it. But when I moved into an apartment with Colby, I didn’t have space for painting and it was kind of toxic ––I worked in oil paint–– to have in my home space. But, I had this like, this need to make something. I saw a magazine article about making your own simple necklaces, and I was instantly curious, and eventually went to a bead store and it was like, oh my gosh, yes. I got some wire, pliers, and a wire cutting tool and I started dabbling around and playing with it. It was so exciting to be there in this space with all the beads and color. I was excited to wear something that I actually made. At that time, I was teaching yoga and I started getting a lot of comments on the jewelry I was wearing. And then, about 6 months into it, a friend of mine who was also a jeweler was opening up her own store. She asked me to sell some of my pieces on consignment, and gave me a few professional tips about materials and presentation.

JS: Wait, wait, wait –– let’s backtrack –– when was this and where in the world are we?

Photo by Caitlin Gallavan

Photo by Caitlin Gallavan

EG: Good question. It was probably, wow about 10 years ago now in Austin, Texas. I’d just put painting on the back burner. Those first initial pieces were really organic, wire-wrapped, gemstone and kind of crude but they actually sold.

JS: And those first pieces, were they similar to what you’re making now?

EG: Kind of. In some ways, yes, but in other ways, no. I’ve simplified what I do. These were all one-of-a-kind pieces with more focus on intricate wire wrapping and bigger, more organic shapes. 

JS: What drove you to learn metalsmithing?

EG: Honestly I got a little tired of the limits that I had with just wire wrapping, and I got a little sick of doing the same thing over and over. It was half accessibility and half finding my own style and technique, branching out of my comfort zone and working through a challenge. I have never taken a jewelry class so my techniques and styles have evolved in a pretty organic and unique way. I think that has helped me keep an individual look to my work. I also don't use any heat in my studio, no soldering or casting, so I have this challenge that I like... I try to do things with the limits I have set in place, and work within that challenge to create something new. It’s fun right now, but in the future, I might be ready to branch out into more traditional techniques while still holding on to my own style and look. My main motivation that’s driven me has been my own taste and what I want to wear. Trying to blend it to where it was still noticeably my style but more simplistic and refined.

JS: Especially in a saturated and competitive market.

EG: Oh yes.

JS: One thing you mentioned was your first trip to the bead store. Tell me about that.

EG: For me what made it so exciting, coming from a painting background, is it’s another form of a pallet and I love gemstones that have texture, the way they reflect light. In my studio space, I don’t organize or compartmentalize the stones and metals. They’re all laid out on the table and it’s messy and usually, I don’t have a plan when I’m making something new. I just pick some stones that draw my attention, and then start to play with metals and wire to create a new and exciting piece or collection. I may have an idea, but today metal has more of an influence on me and I love to accent it with beads. Once I started getting more into hand-cutting, hammering, texturizing and shaping the metal it became more fun and interesting to me than beadwork. But I still love working with gemstones... adding in what could now be called expertise in that field of wire wrapping and weaving the stones into and around metals.  

JS: Oh, wow I love that. It’s so counterintuitive to what I perceived your process being. So, at one point you mentioned having this need to create. Can you elaborate on that feeling? Is it inside of you?

EG: You know, I think everybody has their own things that drive them, and I can just remember ever since being a child ––and my sister’s the same way, she’s also an artist–– we were really encouraged by our mom, also an artist, to make and create things. I get into a zone, I feel happy, relaxed, excited, and driven when I sit down in my space. The excitement of making something beautiful out of raw materials just doesn’t get old for me. I still love painting, making little sculptures, drawing...but for me, making jewelry is a combination of all of that. I guess today that’s where I find a really large amount of meaning in my life. It’s creating and having that process evolve into something functional.

“I guess today that’s where I find a really large amount of meaning in my life. It’s creating and having that process evolve into something functional.”

JS: Ah, the creative process.

Photo by Caitlin Gallavan

Photo by Caitlin Gallavan

EG: And you know now, having a family, it’s not as much as a desire to grow and expand the business but it’s the one thing that’s for me that I want to hold on to as I raise my boy, soon to be two boys. Because everything else is for other people. I’ve got to be able to hold onto it for myself and push for creativity and exploration. I think that if I can manage to keep this part of myself, I will be happier and more purpose-driven in raising children. It’s truly impossible to ever find real balance, but we can strive for it, right? 

JS: Yes. So true. Ok, ok, ok –– let’s jump back to the main thought this blog series was born of; what’s made you as an artist?

EG: It’s such a generic answer but it’s true. It's having that inherent drive to create, and being inspired nature. But nature is everything. You know, you’re looking at a piece of bark on a tree, how the light reflects off of it and you want to make something that sparks the same feeling of taking in that beauty all around us... that looks organic and has that natural light play, even though it begins as a rigid, hard piece of metal. My work is reflected in nature because everything is kind of organic, and unplanned and not perfect––and I’m a pretty messy, unplanned person.

JS: But that’s what’s so beautiful about you!

EG: If I didn’t have the responsibilities that adult life and family brings, I’d probably be more of a wandering soul. One of the biggest challenges that I’ve faced with being in jewelry ––which is similar to fashion–– are the seasonal demands and competition behind that concept. Coming out with an entirely new collection every couple of months, I’ve learned, now that I’m more established and settled in my own comfort level, I can play with different ideas and styles seasonally and hold on to the staples from each line. I have found what works for me is a less rigid timeline or deadlines. I love working with smaller and independent boutiques where I am able to customize collections and collaborate with my retail partners like you for those unique spaces and their clientele. So you won’t see all the same pieces at every shop I sell my work in. In some ways, that forces me to keep this business small, but for right now that works perfectly with the other obligations I have in my life. 

JS: Sweet. Um, lastly, what’s your tip for someone curious about taking the leap from a hobby to launching a small business from their passion (be it jewelry or another creative expression)?

EG: I spent a lot of time in my twenties not having a clear vision of what I wanted to do. Today I know it’s really helpful to spend time thinking, writing, and putting out real clear objectives on what you do want and the goals you have. Then put a real force behind that and without the distractions of other pursuits and side-jobs that you don’t want to be your career, that is not quick money, but that is fulfilling. Give it everything. It took everything I had to get this going from a hobby to a legitimate business. I gave up a lot of my life and financial security to work towards this goal. I have to give my husband credit for that... a few years ago he said to me pretty point blank: stop daydreaming and really go for it, or get a real job that you can rely on. I was terrified of having an office job and just as scared of continuing to work in the service industry. I loved teaching yoga but it didn’t fulfill me in the same way that creating my own artistic business would, so basically, bite the bullet. 

Discover Emily’s handiwork on her site here ––Emily Gibbons Jewelry–– or come into Found Natural Goods for a full display of her work in-person. Now, the real question, which Found artist is next?

Photo by Caitlin Gallavan

Photo by Caitlin Gallavan

Read the rest of our Make(Her) Blog Series

  • Make(Her) No. 6: Carol Arnott, Picker & Stylist

  • Make(Her) No. 5: Marité Acosta, Potter & Chef

  • Make(Her) No. 4: Paige Bruguier, Accessory Designer

  • Make(Her) No. 3: Tanya Hughes, Alchemist Plant Devotee

  • Make(Her) No. 2: Morgan Miller, Painter & Midwife

  • Make(Her) No. 1: Emily Gibbons, Jewelry Designer

In founder musings, lifestyle, oregon gifts Tags artist interview, jewelry designer interview, oregon artist, oregon artist interview, oregon jeweler, oregon jewelry designer
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Found Natural Goods PASTIME BLOG

Here's what we do* in our Pastime, off the clock. 

*make, create, see, love, discover, admire, adventure, and dream.


  • August 2022
    • Aug 15, 2022 "Goodwill Hunting" - Getting Real with Maya Dahlgreen of MAYA MEYER Aug 15, 2022
  • June 2022
    • Jun 23, 2022 So Glad To Be FOUND Jun 23, 2022
  • January 2020
    • Jan 15, 2020 Winter Snapshot: Bend, Oregon Jan 15, 2020
    • Jan 3, 2020 The Environmental Impacts of Modern Conveniences Jan 3, 2020
  • November 2019
    • Nov 7, 2019 The Make(Her) No. 6: Carol Arnott, Picker & Stylis Nov 7, 2019
  • September 2019
    • Sep 18, 2019 Analogue Tintypes Portraiture, Halloween Pop-Up at FOUND Sep 18, 2019
  • July 2019
    • Jul 31, 2019 The Make(Her) No. 5: Marité Acosta, Potter & Chef Jul 31, 2019
  • June 2019
    • Jun 1, 2019 Endless Love for Craigslist Mirrors Jun 1, 2019
  • May 2019
    • May 23, 2019 The Make(Her) No. 4: Paige Bruguier, Accessory Designer May 23, 2019
  • March 2019
    • Mar 25, 2019 The Make(Her) No. 3: Tanya Hughes, Alchemist & Plant Devotee Mar 25, 2019
  • February 2019
    • Feb 15, 2019 The Make(Her) No. 2: Morgan Miller, Painter & Midwife Feb 15, 2019
  • January 2019
    • Jan 26, 2019 The Make(Her) No. 1: Emily Gibbons, Jewelry Designer Jan 26, 2019
    • Jan 11, 2019 Introducing, Jacqueline Smith - Found Natural Goods' Founder Jan 11, 2019
  • November 2018
    • Nov 14, 2018 We're on TV! Nov 14, 2018
    • Nov 12, 2018 Outtakes, CYR Photographic Nov 12, 2018
  • September 2018
    • Sep 30, 2018 Self-Care Sunday at Found with Amulette Studios Sep 30, 2018
  • August 2018
    • Aug 31, 2018 We Got the Cover with These Creatives Aug 31, 2018
  • July 2018
    • Jul 26, 2018 A Grand Opening for Found Natural Goods' Brick-and-Mortar Jul 26, 2018
  • April 2018
    • Apr 3, 2018 We've Sharpened Our Product Photography - Gallivan Creative - Bend, Oregon Photo Studio Apr 3, 2018
  • September 2017
    • Sep 18, 2017 Chef's Table Inspiration vs. Search Engine Optimization Sep 18, 2017
  • May 2017
    • May 1, 2017 MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND Pop Up | LIBERTY THEATER downtown Bend, Ore. May 1, 2017
  • November 2016
    • Nov 28, 2016 FNG at Into The Woods, Holiday Market Nov 28, 2016
  • August 2016
    • Aug 29, 2016 Precious as Perfume Aug 29, 2016
  • June 2016
    • Jun 1, 2016 Sauces That Make Life Better Jun 1, 2016
  • May 2016
    • May 25, 2016 Incorporating Life Hacks From Pro-Athletes May 25, 2016
    • May 9, 2016 Two Ways to Declutter into Mindfulness May 9, 2016
  • April 2016
    • Apr 1, 2016 Priceless Heirlooms: Print Plates Apr 1, 2016
  • March 2016
    • Mar 29, 2016 Photo Series: Natural Gradients Mar 29, 2016
    • Mar 22, 2016 Perks of International Travels Mar 22, 2016
  • February 2016
    • Feb 23, 2016 Matsumoto, Japan Treasures Feb 23, 2016
  • January 2015
    • Jan 22, 2015 Bend, Ore. makes NYT 52 Places to Go in 2015 List Jan 22, 2015
  • November 2014
    • Nov 3, 2014 Photo Series: Non-Graffiti Graffiti Nov 3, 2014
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(541) 241-2495

FOUND NATURAL GOODS

1001 Northwest Brooks Street

Bend, Oregon 97703

© FOUND NATURAL GOODS, 2025

FOUND

Shop Downtown Bend, Oregon

Oregon Handmade, Up-Cycled, VNTG, Zero-Waste & Organic Self-Care. “A Boutique Curated in Circularity.” Est. 2014

Found Natural Goods | 1001 Northwest Brooks Street, Bend, OR, 97703, United States

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