Welcome to the Blackberry Arts Festival!
The Blackberry Arts Festival is a juried art and craft festival that has been happening consecutively for 40 years. It was started to highlight the works of local artists and crafters during the annual harvest of the blackberry. It features an impressive array of metalwork, jewelry, quilts, candles, hand-painted clothing, wine, carved wood, and much more available for purchase. The festival also includes food vendors. It is not hard to find food and craft featuring the blackberry. This is a free event with activities centered on Central Avenue in downtown Coos Bay.
For more information, contact Harv Schubothe at (541) 266-9706 or follow the Coos Bay Downtown Association on Facebook.
Blackberry Arts Festival Vendor Section
August 23 and 24, 2025: Be sure and mark this event on your calendar. If you are an artist or a vendor of handmade goods, The Blackberry Arts Festival is a great place to sell your work. Due to the festival’s popularity throughout Oregon, available space goes quickly. Act today and ensure your space for the 2025 Blackberry Arts Festival.
Blackberry Arts Festival Rules and Regulations
Blackberry Arts Festival application
For more information contact Mainstreet Manager, Harv Schubothe at (541) 266-9706, or stop by the Coos Bay Downtown Association office located at 320 Central Ave #410, Coos Bay, OR 97420
Pay your Vendors Fees or other CBDA Fees
Please thank our 2024 Blackberry Arts Festival Sponsors:
The Coos Bay Downtown Association will hold the fourth annual “It’s All Berry Good” recipe contest during the 2025 Blackberry Arts Festival. This year recipes will be accepted at 10 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 23 at Coos Bay Elks No. 1160, located at 265 Central Ave. in downtown Coos Bay. Look for the Berry!
- Drop off your entry at the Coos Bay Elks No. 1160, located at 265 Central Avenue in downtown Coos Bay between 9am-11am.
- Judging begins at Noon,
- Winners will be announced at 2pm,
- Each recipe entry should be size-able enough for at least six healthy tastes,
- Include a copy of a detailed recipe with credit given to the original source; for example Betty Crocker’s CookBook or great grandma Lulu’s family recipe,
- Blackberry Use is a must. Also considered: appearance, prep time, ease of recipe, and, or course, taste.
- Prize awards will be made at 2pm.
- The winner and top contestants will receive amazing prizes from our CBDA members.
The history of the Blackberry Arts Festival
The Blackberry Arts Festival is one of the two largest festivals in the Bay Area. Like its counterpart, the Bay Area Fun Festival in September, they have been local and regional draws for over four decades. Being in the rural part of the state, we sometimes must be creative to provide our citizens better livability. Through the years, we have learned that not only do we have the blessing of natural beauty, but we have a rich cultural side. The Blackberry Arts Festival represents both of those.
While the blackberry can be a thorn in the side of property owners, it is also delicious. It can be used in almost every type of cooking. Overtime, volunteers have continued to celebrate that harvest, when the blackberry is ripest for picking. It comes every August, and though the year the festival started is debated between 1980 and 1981 it has happened every year since, changing with the times and becoming what it is today.
Former State Senator and Coos Bay Mayor Joanne Verger was one of those involved in the original event. At the time, she and her husband had just sold the car dealership they owned. She had been selected as the Downtown Business Association promotional director. She along with The World Newspaper Editor/Publisher Jerry Barron and local artist Dorothy Vaughan decided to start a small intimate event that featured artists on the Coos Bay Mall for a day. Joanne provided the logistics and promotion along with Barron, an artist himself, and Vaughan gathered artists to set up with their easels and work in front of an appreciative viewing public.
Over the years, the festival has remained on the mall. It is now a two-day event that draws not only local artists but many from all over the country. It is a juried festival, meaning the items being displayed must be high quality and handmade. The vendors at the market are not only encouraged to sell their items but demonstrate them being made as well. Most come from Oregon, but before the pandemic, and at the height of the festival, there could be up to 100 artists, silversmiths, photographers, wood workers, potters and more from the three western states and as far as New York.
The local PEO organization became famous for their delicious blackberry cobblers and pies. They sell out at the festival every year. That tradition continued during the pandemic when the festival was on hiatus by using word of mouth and social media networks. At the festival, all food vendors are encouraged to feature at least one blackberry influenced item whether it is food, sauce, or beverage. That has also branched out to local restaurants who also feature blackberry treats and adult beverages.
The downtown business association has become the Coos Bay Downtown Association which still sponsors and organizes the festival. They also promote the downtown core and Coos Bay’s Front Street. Their website features additional information about the festival and CBDA Membership.
While here, festivalgoers will find many activities to enhance their trip. Of course, if they like to pick Blackberry’s, they can find them just about anywhere. A popular spot is above Mingus Park/Chosi Gardens along the roads and hiking trails. Libby Road in the Englewood area, that connects south Coos Bay and Charleston is also a great place to find Blackberry’s.