A Look Inside Vancouver’s Massy Books
Q&A with bookstore owner Patricia Massy.
Massy Books has become a popular destination for progressive readers in Vancouver, with a diverse collection that includes Indigenous novels.
Massy Books has become a popular destination for progressive readers in Vancouver, with a diverse collection that includes Indigenous novels.
The carriages on the Peak 2 Peak gondola act as outdoor art installation, presenting First Nations art in a unique way.
Tradish chef Sarah Meconse Mierau, member of the Sayisi Dene First Nation, has moved into a bricks-and-mortar location in Fort Langley.
Hailing from Kinngait (also known as Cape Dorset), Nunavut, Ashoona’s colourful, otherworldly creations speak to Inuit culture through a contemporary lens.
Sage Paul, founder of Indigenous Fashion Arts, on bringing Indigenous designers to White Milano and cracking open the industry.
Unveiled this past summer, the twelve new cabins at Haida House on Haida Gwaii—the remote, emerald archipelago off the coast of British Columbia—look out onto the Hecate Strait, 1,30 kilometres of open water stretching to the mainland.
For the duo behind wellness company Nuez Acres, pecans are more than a snack. The Mexican and Canadian Indigenous-owned wellness brand in Langley, B.C., brings layers of history and tradition to its pecan oil formulas.
Celebrating its 110th anniversary this year, the Greatest Outdoor Show on Earth celebrates Western heritage, culture, and community spirit, including that of local Indigenous groups.
Jenn Harper started Cheekbone Beauty in 2016 because she had a dream. “Sometimes I say that people interpret it as a vision because I’m Indigenous, but it was an actual dream—a crazy dream about all these Native girls covered in lip gloss, laughing. It was joyful,” Harper says.