Home & Living

Our Favorite Places to Go Antiquing in the Baltimore Area

The case for antique mall shopping—and where to do it.
—Illustration by Alice Pattullo

The great fun of antique shopping is in the unknown. Every booth, table, and display is an opportunity for discovery. (Or even riches if you watch enough Antiques Roadshow.) It takes patience, luck, and a lot of digging to unearth a special find. And if you’re really in the mood to browse? Enter the antique mall.

Antique malls emerged as a popular retail format in the late 20th century, evolving from individual antique shops to centralized, multi-vendor spaces where dealers lease booths to sell vintage items. They became prevalent as a way to consolidate, offering diverse, sometimes high-quality, and often curated finds all in one place.

They have proven to be the perfect place to go on a leisurely, solitary shopping trip, but there’s an exhibitionist element to them as well. Seeing what others are finding. Hearing gasps and delighted chatter, sometimes a hearty laugh. Was the day’s find a treasure or trash? Curious or bizarre? Opulent or meager?

We spent time at several antique malls in the area—or collectives for a more modern verbiage—and here’s what we found.

THE DISTILLERY COLLECTIVE
Cockeysville
Tucked down Beaver Run Lane in Cockeysville, The Distillery Collective started as a warehouse for Gore Dean, the high-end interior design furniture and accessories store. When customers would come to pick up a custom order they would want to “shop” other items (none of which were for sale) and so Deborah Gore Dean had the idea to add other curated booths as an antique collective.

Now about 12 local antique and vintage dealers share the space, occupying the second floor of the Sherwood Rye warehouse. The collective keeps pretty regular hours (they are open Wednesday to Sunday), offers custom curation services by appointment, and can pretty much ship anywhere. Booths are well organized and everyone working is warm and helpful—especially Andrea Nugent (“most of us started as collectors,” she explains) who loves mid-century and keeps a well-appointed booth of beautiful bowls, artwork, and trinkets.

Other standouts include Elise Rulan’s The Sourceress and her handsome vintage furniture, Strega Sano’s tabletops and kitchen accessories, and of course Gore Dean herself, who often pops up on the collective’s up-to-date Instagram account. Some of our favorite finds include vintage postcards, a replica diving helmet, a vintage-y orange graduated bead necklace, and a set of eight hand-painted casserole dishes shaped like turtles from prominent American designer Carole Stupell.

THE ANTIQUE CENTER
Savage Mill
It’s a super rainy Saturday morning, and Savage Mill is mobbed. This historic, re-purposed 19th-century cotton manufacturing complex (now listed on the National Register of Historic Places) houses the Antique Center on the ground floor of the Old Weave Building. It’s a little overwhelming with more than 100 “dealers” (as they call them) and 20,000 square feet of antiques and collectibles. It feels like entering a labyrinth with every turn looking a bit like the one before. (“Have I been here before,” I wondered more than once.) But the selection is impressive—artwork, accessories, furniture, militaria, glass, ceramics, jewelry, and toys. The website also mentions “gas station memorabilia,” although I didn’t see any the day I visited.

The Antique Center is clean and well-lit (despite being in the basement) with a central information desk where you can ask question and pay for all the merchandise. (The Antique Center also provides scheduled appraisals.) We found an impressive selection of glasses (especially gold rimmed coupes), vinyl, a vintage 1970s Mickey Mouse push button phone, sports memorabilia, and plenty of colorful Fiesta dinnerware, old guitars, and stained glass that looked like it came from somewhere important. And The Antique Center had an impressive number of dolls. From Barbies and Cabbage Patch Kids to a vintage Shirley Temple doll, a “Teeny Tiny Tears” babydoll, and fancy French antique dolls with the eyes that sort of follow you around (if you’re into that sort of thing).

THE ANTIQUE DEPOT
Ellicott City
If you like to find your antiques in a space a bit more antiquey, The Antique Depot is pretty perfect. This charming 1873 livery stable—just across the street from the B&O Ellicott City Station Museum on Maryland Avenue—houses more than 60 booths selling antiques and vintage items across several floors. Quick history lesson: The Dorsey Livery Stable provided services, primarily offering horses, carriages, and wagons for rent, along with stabling (housing, feeding, watering) for travelers’ own horses, and also delivered ice and coal for 51 years. It became Clark Hardware Store in 1924 and finally the Antique Depot in 1989.

There’s a certain charm here—creaky floors, quiet basement, and a kind of sweet chaos. Some of our favorite finds included a chicken-shaped cookie jar, old campaign buttons (“Mondale Ferraro for America”), copper Jello molds, and Royal Navy rum rations (the daily amount of rum given to sailors aboard naval ships). Here you can discover lots of Lionel train sets, Beanie Babies, license plates, and an eight-piece antique German Lusterware spice jar set. There were loads of books, comics and vintage magazines. Plus, tons of old McCormick spice containers and pharmacy bottles, ecru linens, “wedding hankies,” and patterned napkins. One area even had an assortment of old-school Fisher-Price toys (still in the boxes) and an Easy-Bake Oven. And the Antique Depot has one of the best selections of vintage clothes too.

THE ARTFUL FLEA
Catonsville
In a sweet little house in Catonsville (just a few blocks off Frederick Road), you’ll find The Artful Flea, owned by antique maven Reggie Sajauskas. Objects Found, her bigger antique store, has been closed since May 2025 because of a fire. But this spot and the (other) Objects Found in Arbutus remain open. The Artful Flea tends towards art, antiques, fashion, flora, and furniture, with a healthy nod to local artists. If you like your antiques mixed in with new pieces, this will be right up your alley.

We found timeworn Nancy Drew books, a vintage deviled egg plate, old globes, hand-made (new) birdhouses, and antique glasses turned into pincushions. There’s a room packed with vintage-style clothes on racks. We loved the framed crewel floral bouquet, and the odd assortment of lawn ornaments (R2-D2, Buddah, gargoyle, flamingo). The Arbutus space is small and very, very full of stacks of dishes, glasses, mixing bowls, serving platters, mugs, juicers, and Corningware. There’s tons of costume jewelry including chunky bracelets and clip-on earrings and a gorgeous set of vintage Anchor Hocking floral drinking glasses. (Maybe my favorite find of the day.)

If there’s one thing antique enthusiasts love to talk about, it’s their favorite places to find collectibles. So, here are 11 more shops (nearby or worthy of a road trip—including one with a soda fountain inside) that were suggested for more antique hunting.

—Illustration by Alice Pattullo

MARYLAND

  • Beaver Creek Antique Market, Hagerstown
  • East Main Antiques, Westminster
  • Emmittsburg Antique Mall, Emmitsburg
  • Emporium Antiques, Frederick
  • Englanders Antiques Grill and Soda
  • Fountain, Oakland
  • Foxwell’s Antiques & Collectibles, Easton
  • Seneca Cannery Antiques, Havre de Grace

PENNSYLVANIA

  • The Antique Marketplace of Lemoyne, Lemoyne
  • Cackleberry Farm Antique Mall, Paradise
  • Renninger’s Antique Market, Adamstown
  • Shrewsbury Antique Center, Shrewsbury