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Coming Soon
13 days away
SneakerCon San Diego 2026 — San Diego Convention Center, May 30 SneakerCon is the world's largest sneaker event, and the San Diego stop brings it to the Convention Center floor for a full day of trading, collecting, authenticating, and finding the pair you have been tracking for months. What Happens on the Floor: Tens of thousands of individual pairs laid out across hundreds of seller tables — vintage Air Jordans, deadstock Nike SBs, same-week drops that sold out online in seconds, rare colorways that only move at events like this. The authentication desk runs all day. If you are buying something significant, you get it checked before you walk out. What to Expect: This is not a retail store. Prices are negotiated on the floor. Condition grades matter and sellers will walk you through theirs if you ask. The San Diego sneaker community turns out for this — expect to run into people you recognize and people you will know by the end of the day. Getting There: San Diego Convention Center, 111 W Harbor Drive, downtown San Diego. Gaslamp Quarter parking structures on 5th and 6th Ave, 5–25 depending on time. MTS Trolley — Convention Center station (Blue/Orange lines) is a one-minute walk. Tickets required for entry — general admission and VIP available at sneakercon.com. May 30, 2026.
Coming Soon
27 days away
SneakerCon Los Angeles returns to the Los Angeles Convention Center on June 13–14, 2026 — two days, one address, and thousands of pairs you will not find at retail. Doors open at 10 AM both days. Bring your grails, bring your heat, bring your trade bait. The floor runs collector-to-collector: no bots, no lottery, no retail markup. You are buying directly from the person across the table. Authentication is on-site — bring anything you want verified before money changes hands. The inventory spans same-week drops to deadstock Jordans from the nineties, vintage Yeezys, Travis Scott collabs, rare Dunks, and streetwear that never made it to a shelf. Parking is available in the South Hall and West Hall garages on-site. Expect 0–40 flat rate; pre-book through SpotHero or ParkWhiz to lock in lower rates. The Convention Center is also accessible from the 7th Street/Metro Center station. Tickets start around 3 and are available online — all ages need a ticket (4 and up). If you are buying or trading, bring cash and know your sizes. If you are selling, check the vendor table info on sneakercon.com.
Coming Soon
16h away
Melrose Trading Post is one of Los Angeles's most beloved weekly outdoor markets — a Sunday institution at Fairfax High School in West Hollywood where vendors sell vintage clothing, handcrafted artisan goods, antique furniture, art, records, and one-of-a-kind objects to a crowd that treats the market as a social gathering as much as a shopping trip. The Melrose Trading Post has been running since 1995, which gives it something most markets cannot manufacture: a real community. The same vendors return week after week, the same customers show up every Sunday, and the collective accumulation of that repetition creates something that feels more like a neighborhood ritual than a commercial event. The quality is genuinely variable — treasure hunting is part of the culture — but the atmosphere is consistent: creative, laid-back, and decidedly LA. Fairfax High School, 7850 Melrose Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90046 (parking lot). Every Sunday, year-round, from approximately 9 AM to 5 PM. $3 admission goes to benefit Fairfax High School programs. Parking limited in the lot — street parking on Melrose and Fairfax, or take the 217 bus. The market covers the school's full parking lot and can accommodate a few hours of serious exploration. Food trucks and vendors are on-site. Rain occasionally interrupts — check @melrosetradingpost for same-day status.
Coming Soon
5 days away
Gaylord Pacific Resort & Convention Center, 1000 H St, Chula Vista. May 22nd, 2026. Card Party 4 is the trading card game pop-up market that treats the hobby the way it deserves — a real venue, a serious vendor selection, and the specific energy of a room full of people who know exactly what they're looking at. Card Party is not a casual flea market. The vendors who table here specialize — sealed product, singles, graded cards, vintage sets, and the newer releases that have been moving in the secondary market. Walking the floor is the experience of seeing the full spectrum of what collecting looks like at every level, from the person pulling a specific card for a deck they've been building to the collector sitting on long boxes of raw vintage stock. The Gaylord Pacific Resort gives the event the setting to match its ambitions — a convention-scale resort venue in Chula Vista, accessible from San Diego and across the South Bay. card.party for the full vendor list and ticket details. If you collect cards of any kind — Pokemon, Magic, sports, vintage — this is the show that covers the entire hobby under one roof. Come with a want list. Leave with more than you planned.
Coming Soon
6 days away
Old Town Temecula hosts its monthly vintage and makers market along Front Street -- local dealers bringing curated vintage clothing, jewelry, ceramics, plants, and handmade goods to the brick-lined blocks that are already one of the better walking streets in Inland Southern California. The May 23, 2026 edition opens at 9:00 AM and runs through the afternoon. The wine country crowd mixes with the vintage hunters; the combination makes for a morning that reliably turns into an afternoon. Front Street in Old Town Temecula is a genuine discovery walk even before the market sets up -- historic storefronts, wine tasting rooms, and local restaurants make it easy to turn a market visit into a full day. Admission is free to browse. Bring cash for the dealers who do not run Square -- vintage markets at this scale typically have a mix of card and cash-only vendors. The market is located at 28690 Front Street, Temecula, CA 92590. Parking is available along Front Street and in surrounding lots. Old Town is also walkable from several downtown Temecula hotels.
Coming Soon
13 days away
Agenda Festival Long Beach opens the Long Beach Convention Center to the public on May 30, 2026 — every brand in the skate, surf, and streetwear ecosystem under one roof, for a day that feels more like a cultural moment than a shopping event. Agenda started as a trade show. It became something else when it opened to the public: a festival where the brands aren't trying to sell you anything because they already know you. The skate community, the surf community, the streetwear collector — they come here because this is where the industry gathers, and being in the room feels different from browsing the same brands online. Drops happen at Agenda that don't happen anywhere else. Limited pieces from small labels sit next to launches from names you already know. The Long Beach Convention Center has the scale to hold it. Arrive early — the floor gets busy by mid-morning and the brand activations with any kind of queue fill up fast. This is the kind of event that feels like insider access even when it's open to everyone, because the people who show up are the people who care. That's the crowd. That's the room.
Coming Soon
20 days away
The Vintage Market at Hollywood Park runs monthly on Saturday mornings in the massive Lot A adjacent to SoFi Stadium in Inglewood — a sprawling outdoor market with hundreds of vendors covering vintage clothing, furniture, antiques, records, collectibles, art, and curated goods from every era. This is one of the larger vintage markets in the Los Angeles area, and the Hollywood Park location gives it a scale that smaller boutique markets cannot match: you can spend a full morning covering every aisle and still feel like you missed half of it. The range runs from serious antique dealers with priced investment pieces to informal sellers clearing collections, which means the hunting is real. Vinyl records, vintage Levi's, mid-century furniture, sports memorabilia, film props, and objects with no easy classification are all in the same market at the same time. Hollywood Park Lot A, 3900 W Century Blvd, Inglewood, CA 90305 (adjacent to SoFi Stadium). Monthly Saturdays, 8 AM to 3 PM. $5 admission at the gate, cash preferred. Early-bird entry available for serious collectors. Rideshare is practical — the Metro K Line runs to the Crenshaw/LAX station area with a walkable connection to Hollywood Park. Drive and park on-site for the most flexibility — arrival before 9 AM gives you the best selection before the mid-morning crowds arrive.
Coming Soon
28 days away
Rose Bowl Stadium, 1001 Rose Bowl Dr, Pasadena. June 14th. The Rose Bowl Flea Market — 2,500 vendors, the largest in California — runs its second-Sunday format in June with the specific inventory that moves as summer fashion cycles and vintage buyers make room in their collections for fall. The Rose Bowl runs by geography: the serious buyers work the outer rings before 8 AM, where the dealers set up the inventory that moves before the casual crowd arrives. Mid-century furniture, deadstock denim and sneakers, vintage jewelry, original art, old records, cameras, ceramics — it's all present, none of it organized. The discovery requires patience and a route. Come at 7 for first access. Come at 9 if you want the coffee and the crowd. Either way, wear comfortable shoes — the loop is a mile at minimum — and bring cash. Vendors who take Venmo are the exception. The flea market experience at this scale is qualitatively different from anything smaller: the density of options means you find something you didn't know you were looking for, which is the whole point. June in Pasadena is warm and manageable early. Plan to be there before mid-morning.
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