Tomorrow· Jul 3
51.6
Los Angeles Convention Center, 120…
This is not a wrestling show with an anime theme. It is a convergence: Harajuku fashion aesthetics, anime character energy, live music, and genuine athletic competition fused into one arena experience.
Sukeban is Japan's premier female pro wrestling league — and its first-ever World Championship Fight arrives at Anime Expo 2026 on July 3rd at the Los Angeles Convention Center. The league brings rival girl gangs from Tokyo — the Harajuku Stars, Cherry Bomb Girls, and Vandals stables — fighting for a championship belt on the biggest stage in the league's history. Special appearances confirmed. Every match is a story arc. Every outfit is a character declaration.
The room this fills: anime fans who also watch wrestling. Sneakerheads who follow Harajuku drops. AEW and WWE fans who've been waiting for something that hits different — aesthetically, athletically, culturally. Sukeban occupies an intersection no other event touches: J-fashion, pro wrestling, anime convention, live performance. Ticketed separately from AX general admission to keep the room committed.
Entry requirements: valid Anime Expo credential (4-day or any 1-day pass) plus a separate Sukeban event ticket. GA Floor (standing): $51.60. Balcony A (seated): $101.60. VIP Ringside: $151.60. Tickets at leapevents.com — limited capacity.
In 3 days· Jul 5
Fairfax High School, 7850 Melrose …
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.
The OC Night Market returns to OC Fair & Event Center in Costa Mesa for multiple weekends throughout summer and fall 2026, one of the most popular Asian night market experiences in Southern California. The market brings together over 200 food vendors, artisan sellers, performers, and entertainment across a sprawling outdoor festival ground that comes alive after dark. Food is the draw. Vendors span all of Southeast Asia, East Asia, and fusion concepts: Korean corn dogs, Taiwanese popcorn chicken, Vietnamese banh mi, Japanese takoyaki, Filipino bibingka, Hong Kong egg waffles, Thai rolled ice cream, and dozens of innovative hybrids that exist nowhere else. Lines form early for the most popular stalls — arrive by 6 PM for best access before the crowds peak. Beyond food, the market features live K-pop performances, a DJ stage, merchandise vendors with streetwear, phone cases, plushies, and art prints, and an activity zone with carnival-style games. The atmosphere is dense, loud, and celebratory — a distinct cultural experience that captures the energy of Asian night markets at a SoCal scale. OC Fair & Event Center is located at 88 Fair Drive in Costa Mesa. Paid parking on-site. Admission is charged at the gate — see ocnightmarket.com for dates, hours, and pricing. Multiple weekends run throughout the season; check for specific event dates.
In 9 days· Jul 11
Hollywood Park Lot A, 3900 W Centu…
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.
In 10 days· Jul 12
Rose Bowl Stadium, 1001 Rose Bowl …
July at the Rose Bowl Flea Market — the summer heat brings the early birds out before 7am and rewards the hunters who get there before the crowds fill in. 2,500 vendors across the Rose Bowl grounds: vintage fashion, records, ceramics, film photography gear, and the mid-century furniture that fits perfectly into apartments that don't technically have room for it. The second Sunday of July in Pasadena is the most reliable sourcing run in SoCal.
In 10 days· Jul 12
Fairfax High School, 7850 Melrose …
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.
In 10 days· Jul 12
12
Rose Bowl Stadium, 1001 Rose Bowl …
If you care about the thrill of the find — not the browsing, the actual find — the second Sunday of every month at the Rose Bowl is where it happens. Over 2,500 vendors in the parking lot of the Rose Bowl Stadium in Pasadena. The serious ones arrive before dawn for early-bird entry.
Professional pickers, interior designers, fashion stylists, and everyday shoppers converge in a field-sized hunt that runs well into the afternoon. Vintage clothing, mid-century furniture, antiques, art, collectibles, and rare ephemera from every era. The Pasadena setting adds character you will not find in DTLA: San Gabriel Mountains backdrop, the historic stadium, the relaxed San Gabriel Valley energy.
This is a standing social ritual for the SoCal vintage, fashion, and design community. General admission at the gate; early bird entry available for first access. Second Sunday every month. This July edition falls on July 12.
In 10 days· Jul 12
$12
1001 Rose Bowl Dr, Pasadena, CA 91…
The Rose Bowl Flea Market has been running in the Rose Bowl parking lot on the second Sunday of every month since 1968. At full operation it draws up to 2,500 vendors across 46 acres — which means you can spend six hours walking and still not see everything in the back rows.
The market has a geography that regulars learn. Vintage furniture collectors know which aisles to reach first. The clothing section runs separate from housewares. Jewelry vendors cluster. The deeper rows tend toward the stranger and more interesting, which is why experienced buyers park at the far end and work their way in.
Early entry at 8am costs more but gives first access. General admission at 9am is standard for most shoppers. The quality range is enormous — which is exactly why it keeps drawing people.
1001 Rose Bowl Dr, Pasadena, CA 91103. General admission $12; early entry $15. Second Sunday of every month, 9am–4:30pm. Free parking.
July 17, 2026: Opening Day at Del Mar, and there is nothing in Southern California sports quite like it. The summer meet of the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club opens on the third Friday of July with a tradition running since Bing Crosby and Pat O'Brien opened the gates in 1937 — and Opening Day is as much fashion show as horse race, a gathering that dresses up more completely than any other day on San Diego County's sports calendar. The Pacific Ocean is visible from the upper grandstand. The stretch run comes toward you from the far turn in a way no other racetrack geometry quite replicates. Del Mar's first post is 2pm and the feature races run through late afternoon — bring cash for the mutuel windows, find a spot in the infield or claim a picnic table on the apron, and let the afternoon become its own thing. 'Where the surf meets the turf' is not a marketing line. Standing in the grandstand with the ocean two miles to the west, you understand why they built it here. Del Mar Opening Day is a community event as much as a racing event — a social gathering where groups coordinate outfits, book tables in the Turf Club months in advance, and treat the entire day as a summer ritual. The crowd on Opening Day includes serious horseplayers in the clubhouse, fashion-forward groups in the infield, and families making their annual pilgrimage to the track. 2260 Jimmy Durante Blvd in Del Mar. No Coaster service on this date — drive and park on-site or use the shuttle from nearby lots. Arrive early for Opening Day ceremony programming. General admission available. Reserved seating and Turf Club access require advance booking.
Jul 18 – Jul 19, 2026
From $67
Los Angeles Convention Center, Los…
At 9 AM on a Saturday in July, the Los Angeles Convention Center does something most buildings never do: it smells like a vault. Box wax, foam inserts, the faint rubber signature of deadstock soles that have not touched pavement. SneakerCon Los Angeles arrives July 18-19, 2026 — the West Coast anchor of the world's largest sneaker marketplace, and one of the few places where you can walk in with a list and walk out with most of it checked.
Hundreds of vendor tables. Individual collectors beside established resale shops beside brand activations beside people who drove from out of state for this one weekend. A live authentication desk runs all day — verification before money changes hands, which is the only reason experienced collectors trust the floor. Limited drops get announced in the weeks before the event; the rumor cycle starts the moment tickets go on sale.
The LA stop is one of SneakerCon's largest. Volume is real, inventory moves fast, and the authentication line gets long by noon. What is worth knowing: the early hours favor the hunters. The deals are on the tables before the crowds thin them.
Los Angeles Convention Center, 1201 S Figueroa St. July 18-19, 2026. Doors open 9 AM both days. General admission from $67. Tickets at sneakercon.com.
Jul 18, 2026
0
ROW DTLA, 777 S Alameda St, Los An…
ROW DTLA's warehouse architecture changes what a vintage market feels like. Add vetted dealers and a community that treats this as a standing appointment, and you have what Pickwick has been building in the Arts District.
Expect a strong edit of vintage clothing spanning the 1950s through 1990s, vinyl records, vintage homeware, ceramics, and rare prints alongside contemporary makers whose aesthetic extends the vintage sensibility into the present. The Pickwick Vintage Show rewards repeat visits — vendors rotate, new discoveries appear, and the community that forms around the market is part of what makes it work.
This is the kind of event that fashion people, interior designers, and collectors make a standing appointment. Perfect for vintage clothing seekers, Arts District regulars, and anyone looking for a weekend ritual that feels authentically LA. Free entry. Bring cash for the dealers who prefer it. Vendors rotate between editions — the July selection will differ from what appeared in June, which is why repeat visitors keep showing up.
The Melrose Trading Post is a weekly flea market held every Sunday from 9 AM to 5 PM in the parking lot of Fairfax High School at 7850 Melrose Avenue in Los Angeles. It has been running since 1995 — over 25 consecutive years — which means the vendor community and regular buyers have genuine continuity. This is not a transient pop-up.
The mix tilts toward vintage clothing, estate jewelry, mid-century furniture, vinyl records, and collectibles. Around 200 vendors set up each Sunday. The Fairfax District location means the crowd is a blend of local designers, stylists, vintage dealers, and the streetwear community that gravitates to the Fairfax/Melrose corridor. Lids, Supreme, Kith, and Fairfax Ave boutiques are all within walking distance — the market feeds off that ecosystem.
Admission is $3 (cash or Venmo). Early birds show up before 9 AM for the best finds. The lot opens to general public at 9. Parking is limited on Melrose — the school lot is available for a fee, or street park and walk. Proceeds benefit the school's arts education programs.
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.
Jul 19, 2026
3
Fairfax High School, 7850 Melrose …
The parking lot at Fairfax High School has been filling up every Sunday for over two decades because the people who come keep deciding it's worth their morning. That's how you know the Melrose Trading Post is not a shopping event — it's a weekly ritual that happens to have vendors.
The crowd is distinctly West Hollywood: fashion-forward, creative, LGBTQ-welcoming, and perpetually interesting. Vintage denim, 90s sportswear, handcrafted jewelry, indie prints, and rare vinyl appear alongside pop-up food vendors and live performers who set up without announcement. The market operates on a different frequency than the larger monthly markets — it is a neighborhood institution, the kind of place regulars return to like a neighborhood bar.
Proceeds from vendor fees support Greenway Arts Alliance programming at Fairfax High School. Not a polished retail experience but a living, changing, entirely LA one. Best experienced without a shopping list. Arrive open to discovering what finds you. Small donation suggested at entry. Every Sunday 9am to 5pm.
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.
The Pomona Swap Meet & Classic Car Show at Fairplex returns July 26, 2026 — Gate 17, 1801 W. McKinley Ave., Pomona. One of Southern California's longest-running monthly automotive events: hundreds of vendors with vintage auto parts, tools, accessories, memorabilia, and collectibles alongside a classic car show. Doors open 5:00 AM early buyer / 7:00 AM general. Car show runs 7 AM to 2 PM. Whether you're hunting a specific part for a restoration, chasing vintage automotive literature, or want to talk to people who actually know what they're looking at — this is the monthly room for that. General admission 0. Cash recommended. Food vendors on site. Parking at the gate. The Fairplex venue is organized across several lots making it easy to navigate by vehicle type and vendor category.
Most vintage markets in LA are curated for Instagram. The Topanga Vintage Market at Pierce College in Woodland Hills is where you actually find things.
Set against the rolling hills of the West Valley, this open-air market brings together hundreds of curated vendors specializing in vintage clothing, handmade jewelry, antiques, art, and one-of-a-kind finds. Unlike the sprawling commercial markets of DTLA, Topanga maintains an intimate community atmosphere where shoppers linger, discover, and connect with the makers and curators behind each booth.
The market draws fashion-forward shoppers, interior designers, and vintage enthusiasts who come for the carefully selected mix of mid-century furniture, 80s and 90s fashion, handcrafted goods, and rare collectibles. Food vendors and live music round out the experience, making this less an errand and more of a Sunday ritual. Arrive early for first pick on the best finds. Pet-friendly, family-welcoming, and free parking on-site. The market runs rain or shine through the summer months — check the Topanga Vintage Market Instagram for any last-minute weather updates.
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.
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