Kings Mountain Art Fair

4.0 star rating
11 reviews Rating Details

Category: Arts & Crafts  [Edit]

Kings Mountain Community Center/Firehouse
13889 Skyline Blvd.

Woodside, CA 94062
(650) 851-2710
Price Range:
$$
Accepts Credit Cards:
Yes
Parking:
Street
Wheelchair Accessible:
No
Yelp Ad Jigsaw Java
4.5 star rating
18 reviews

kungfupanda l. said: "I just love this place. found it thru a group on deal and glad i bought it. it has different kind of puzzles appropriate for all ages from 2- 100 :))  yes i am simply in love with the place. they not only have puzzles but also very…"   read more »

Sort by: Yelp Sort | Date | Rating | Elites' | Facebook Friends'

12 reviews in English

  • Review from Roxana D.

    •  
    • 8 friends
    • 105 reviews

    Stanford, CA

    4.0 star rating
    9/5/2011 1 Check-in Here

    I can imagine that the parking for this fair can be a nightmare (See prior reviews).  However, since I found out about it on Sunday night, and I already had lunch plans for Monday, I knew we wouldn't be able to get there until later on Monday (Labor day).

    I'm glad we went at the time we did!  We arrived around 3 PM on Monday (the last day).  Most people were leaving; we got a good parking spot.  I thought maybe everyone would be packing up, but no, there was plenty of art to be seen and plenty of time to see it.  The setting was amazing -- a beautiful redwood forest.  It was clear that they do screen the artists -- much of the work was of the type that you would see in galleries.  Though, much like those gallery pieces, the art was expensive!  Maybe one day, I'll be able to afford some of that stuff, but until then, I really enjoyed looking at it.

    TIP: When you exit the fair at the main entrance (not the shuttle entrance), if you look immediately to your left (your right if you are entering), there is a HUGE blackberry bush.  Only a few people had noticed it, so there were plenty of blackberries for the taking.  Yummy!!

  • Review from Madam A.

    •  
    • 76 friends
    • 97 reviews

    El Granada, CA

    3.0 star rating
    9/4/2011

    I went last year when I was about 7&1/2 months prego. I parked as close as I could which was about a mile away. Anyhow the art fair was okay. I wasn't too impressed with anything I saw and the event is literally set up on the mountain side in the dirt. It was nice to be in nature, but parking so far away and having to walk down the windy road to get there was a bit dangerous. They do have a trolley that will take you to and from designated areas, but it was pretty packed and I didn't want to stand around and wait. Over all not my favorite art fair but an okay place to bring the family.

  • Review from Rennis K.

    •  
    • 0 friends
    • 2 reviews

    Los Gatos, CA

    1.0 star rating
    9/5/2011

    Are you KIDDING me!
    We drove 45 minutes to get to Woodside, climbed that uphill windy 4-mile road to get to Hwy 35 and we see all these cars parked along the road and a Shuttle Stop sign.
    So we finally find parking and we walk to the shuttle pick-up point and we wait.  And we wait.  And we wait!
    It was close to an hour we stood there! No shuttle!  I lost my husband to a totally foul and pissed mood.  Me too.
    We got there at around 12:30 and finally got in our car and left at 1:30.  
    What the hell happened ! !  How poorly organized could this have been!
    The vendors need to know
    they missed some willing paying customers, thank you very much.
    We had a number of things we wanted to do today and decided we would go to the Kings Mountain Fair above all else.  
    Totally ruined our precious day off.

  • Review from BudgetBougie B.

    •  
    • 76 friends
    • 38 reviews

    Oakland, CA

    3.0 star rating
    9/10/2011

    Okay this time around. Nothing earth-shattering except Terry's etching.

  • Review from Brian B.

    •  
    • 405 friends
    • 596 reviews

    Livermore, CA

    4.0 star rating
    9/8/2007

    If there is one place where my wife and I are incompatible, it's on the whole concept of the arts and crap fair. She loves them. She marvels at the crocheted toaster cozies, toe rings, henna tattoos, incense, beer can wind chimes and purses made out of license plates. Or cigar boxes. Or vegetable leather. She is fascinated with people who scamper from the Gilroy Garlic Festival to the Stockton Asparagus Festival to the Yuba City Herpes Festival in huge Ford Econoline vans full of handmade soap. Or ceramic cat heads. Or cowboy hats made out of hemp.  If any of this stuff was at all necessary, they would sell it at Safeway. By the register.

    Is there anything more uncomfortable than peering into a display case of jewelery 'handmade by Bernice' that is so butt ugly you just want to point and laugh...but Bernice is hovering over you with a hopeful look in her bloodshot eyes? Or trying to keep a straight face while looking at 'art' that you wouldn't put on your refrigerator if your second grader brought it home from school? Hell, you'd probably bust open his college fund and blow it on beer and porn figuring that he's, well, not exactly university material.

    The King's Mountain Art Fair is nothing like that. It seems like they really screen the artists. It's very high quality and very creative. Most of it so expensive that you really wouldn't seriously consider buying it but it's fun to walk through the enchanted forest and look at it. The setting is so beautiful and the people are so friendly that it makes for a very nice day. The food is great and the beer selection was pretty amazing for a small town art fair. Plus all the food and beer is very reasonably priced. It is really hilly so it's not remotely wheelchair accessible.

    Minus one star for the bizarre parking situation that was designed by those Critical Mass bicycle dudes in conjunction with Franz Kafka and Ted Kaczynski.

  • Review from Kristine D.

    Mountain View, CA

    5.0 star rating
    9/15/2009 3 photos

    I will never be able to happily attend a street fair again after attending the Kings Mountain Art Fair.  Set in the Redwood Forests up on Skyline Boulevard, the atmosphere here felt so magical that you almost expected pixies and fairies to emerge and join in the fun.  

    Held annually during Labor Day weekend, the festival features fine artists from the West Coast, great food (including a variety of gigantic cookies sold by the elementary school) and a nice sized kid activity area where the littles one can read, create and hang out in a tee pee. Proceeds benefit the Kings Mountain Volunteer Fire Brigade and elementary school.

    Take note: Wear good walking shoes because much of the festival is sloped and all of it is scattered throughout the forest.  

    Bring a sweatshirt as well, it can get chilly in such a lush Redwood forest!

    Parking is challenging!  Most of the parking is along the sides of Skyline, a two-lane winding road frequented by bicyclists and motor cyclists.  It can be a little awkward for cars and pedestrians to co-mingle. Please make sure that you wedge your car completely over the white line at the shoulder when parking and keep little ones close as you walk. While most drivers negotiating the area of the festival do so with great care, it only takes one careless moment for a fun outing to turn tragic!

    For more info, visit:
    http://www.kingsmounta.../

  • Review from Sherri C.

    •  
    • 112 friends
    • 546 reviews

    San Jose, CA

    4.0 star rating
    9/4/2006

    Checking out fine arts and crafts in a beautiful redwood setting...one of the most relaxing ways to spend a holiday weekend.  The Kings Mountain Art Fair is held every year the weekend of Labor Day.  (This year was the 43rd annual event.)  Over 200 artists show and sell their works of art at the event.  Admission is free, as is the shuttle bus on Skyline Blvd.  Yes, it can get quite crowded up here, but once you've found a parking spot the rest of the day is quite enjoyable.

    Proceeds benefit Kings Mountain Volunteer Fire Brigade and Kings Mountain Elementary School.  All Art Fair workers, staff and management volunteer their time.  Bookmark this event for next year and (easily) support these local organizations.

  • Review from Bradley N.

    Missoula, MT

    5.0 star rating
    Updated - 9/5/2010 19 photos

    How is this for an unforgettable combination? Mix great art with gigantic trees, add some sun and shade filtering through canopies of green, and let human creativity and natural beauty meld in a kaleidoscope of shifting colors, textures, and patterns.*

    Sound cool? It is! The 2010 edition of the King's Mountain Art Fair ((http://www.yelp.com/bi...) is filled with such magical moments, when the crowds seem to dissipate and you are alone with the art, the redwoods, and the inner echoing of your soul as it resonates gently in aesthetic and spiritual overload. Yes, you can buy the art to take home, or simply admire it all while sipping a beer, or take pleasure in watching your children play, or have an eye-opening conversation with local craftsmen and artists. You can do all of that, and more. But only for three days each Labor Day weekend, when the Santa Cruz Mountain Skyline is transformed into a pilgrimage site and shrine for art in all its many manifestations.

    The artists' booths are tucked into the surrounding forests near to the King's Mountain community center and volunteer fire station (http://www.yelp.com/bi...). The fair helps fund the station as well as the nearby elementary school on Swett Road.

    The items are amazing, from the simple and silly to the sublime. Some of my favorites this year include wooden fish w/ bottle-cap eyes (http://www.yelp.com/bi...); a bulldog made from colored tiles (http://www.yelp.com/bi...); exquisite and somewhat eerie wire-mesh sculptures of jellyfish, squid (http://www.yelp.com/bi...), ravens (http://www.yelp.com/bi...), goats (http://www.yelp.com/bi...), and a menagerie of beasts and beauties; and a set of sensual Buddha-like faces carved out of stone that look as it they were crafted by the hands of nature, not man (http://www.yelp.com/bi...). From one angle, the American flag above the fire station was visible, making for an indelible image of 21st century American life in all its diversity and mix of faces both old and new (http://www.yelp.com/bi...). Truth be told, we're all relative newcomers compared to the ancient redwoods, like the majestic Methuselah a few miles down the road from the art fair, who is nearly 1900 years old (http://www.yelp.com/bi...) or one-armed Jack, a megatree hidden in the remote reaches of nearby Purisima Creek Redwoods Open Space Preserve (http://www.yelp.com/bi...).

    Additionally, there are lots of great displays of glass, wood, toys, photographs, jewelery, and even recorded music. You'll never shop at IKEA again!

    But the best part, I think, is the living art you make yourself by stopping to look at the trees and displays from unusual vantage points. It's like an outdoor museum of never-ending, constantly-changing exhibitions. Well, it does come to end, after a long weekend's whirlwind of late summer activity. Then, when everyone has packed up and left and the last shuttle buses have departed, the forest breathes a collective sign of relief, as it reverts back to its serene and splendid everyday form, patiently waiting for the next arrivals of art, artists, and admirers the following year.

    (*) Written to celebrate my 1-year Yelping anniversary. Thanks for reading!

    Listed in: Picture Perfect, Confessions of an ex-IKEA…, Santa Cruz Mts Top 10

    Was this review …?

    1 Previous Review: Show all »

    • 4.0 star rating
      9/10/2009

      There is nothing that redwoods cannot render more beautiful, be it cold beer or great art. Put all… Read more »

  • Review from Jen Y.

    Mountain View, CA

    5.0 star rating
    9/7/2009

    Hellooooo chili cheeseburgers and giant cookies!!

    I'm tired of most art fairs but would totally go to this one again. Feels like a cross between a hippy artist colony and summer camp.

    Love that it's run by volunteers (who not only do one heck of a job, but really seem to be enjoying themselves) and that the event benefits local schools and other orgs.

    The food (also made and served by volunteers) was awesome...  Art was great, yes it's similar to what you see at many other fairs, but generally very high quality, and the setting under the redwoods can't be beat.

  • Review from LXS S.

    •  
    • 5 friends
    • 247 reviews

    Corte Madera, CA

    5.0 star rating
    8/31/2008

    This Art Fair ROCKS!!!  The hardest part is finding a place to park, but once you've done that, relax and enjoy yourself.  There are free shuttles to take you to the fair.  You will find yourself in an incredibly serene setting in the redwoods.  Warning that you will be walking up and down hills, it's not a huge work out but you need to step carefully.  The artists and crafts people are high quality.  There are some very reasonably priced bargains but some items are way out of most people's price ranges.  Example - bird's eye maple rocking chair for $11,000!!  

    Everyone is friendly, the food & beverages are high quality at a reasonable price.  Compared to the other major art festival over Labor Day in the Bay Area (Sausalito)--I prefer this any day.

  • Review from jazzy l.

    •  
    • 25 friends
    • 1284 reviews

    San Francisco, CA

    3.0 star rating
    9/7/2009

    I like the idea/concept of an art fair held in the woods during labor day.

    All the proceeds go back to King's Mountain Schools.

    The "woods" was the perfect setting. It was slopey (with woodchips) on the ground.  

    FOOD - Burger, Beer, Fries, Strawberry cake, $4 cookies.

    Designers - It's mostly folk art, figurines and ceramic pots.  Not really my kind of jewelery.

    I guess it's nice to mix and mingle?

    I saw two restaurants on this road -

    The Mountain House
    The Bella Vista

  • Review from Glaciala A.

    •  
    • 18 friends
    • 548 reviews

    Providence, RI

    5.0 star rating
    9/6/2010

    Of all the art festivals in the Bay area, this one has solidified the tally as my favorite. It's soo much better than the Palo Alto, Menlo Park, Los Gatos, or Los Altos art festivals. Definitely get there early so that you can find parking along Skyline. Or, you can always take the shuttle. The artwork is high quality--vetted by the festival itself. It's so beautiful to see paintings hanging from redwood trees and to walk in the shade, it's quite nice. Go!

Deals Nearby

People Who Viewed This Also Viewed...