Best Gift Market

Sunday 3 December 9am - 6pm at Goldstein Reserve, Coogee

Here are some example of stalls from the 2019 Best Gift Market.

Best Gift Market

Start your Christmas shopping early at this environmentally-friendly stocking filler winner at Coogee Beach

The Best Gift Market is a new Christmas event showcasing local, handmade, environmentally friendly products. There will be market stalls with artisans and designers showcasing homewares, gifts and products from across the Eastern suburbs and wider Sydney.

More than 160 stallholders will have their original work for sale. They include interesting ceramics, handmade glass gifts, original fashion, clothing, blankets, knitted and wooden toys for babies and children, amazing jewellery, plants, swimwear, unique homewares and much more.

Do not miss out on live music, entertainment and activities at our Best Gift Market!

Relax and listen to live music while exploring an array of products and spending time with family and friends.

TIMEPROGRAM
9:00 – 9:50 amAllan Chapple
10:00 – 10:50 amZumba with Nicole
11:00 – 11:50  amWill Baker
12:00 – 12:50Pat Powell band
1:00 – 1:05  pmWelcome to Country - Aunty Lola
1:05 – 1:15 pmMayors’ speech
1:15 - 2:00 pmSantino Salvadore
2:10 – 3:00 pmSugar Bowl hokum
3:15 – 4:00 pmSantino Salvadore
4:10 – 5:00 pmSugar Bowl hokum
5:10 – 6:00 pmPat Powell band
TIMEPHOTO WITH SANTA
1:15 – 1:45 pmPhoto with Green Santa
2:15 – 2:45 pmPhoto with Green Santa
3:15 – 3:45 pmPhoto with Green Santa
4:15 – 4:45 pmPhoto with Green Santa

Each year Randwick Council invites residents to think about the environment over the Festive season by considering gifts that last and can help out the environment e.g. solar panels, compost bins, bicycles, gifts from charity organisations, bee hives, chooks, and the rest!

The Best Gift Market is an extension of Sustainability’s, Sustaining our City annual campaign called the Best Gift in the World where we encourage our community to be mindful at Christmas time with considering packaging, thinking about the amounts of food we prepare and food wasted around this time of year and considering gift items that benefit would the environment.

Held only once a year, this is an opportunity not to be missed. Take a look at the highlights from the Best Gift Market 2017 and 2019!

For future event updates, check this and What's On page and be sure follow us on Facebook and twitter for more useful tips.

Reduce your eco footprint for Christmas

best gift

The Best Gift in the World

To help you on your way to a Green Christmas, The Best Gift in the World is a website that provides a range of green gift ideas - gifts that won't cost the Earth - including compost bins and worm farms, free cycling and bike maintenance workshops and organic food hampers provided by local food suppliers.

To be different this year, give long-lasting presents that will be remembered and used in the future, and most importantly, visit The Best Gift in the World website today.

Wishing you a safe and happy festive season from our Council project team.

How to consume less at Christmas

Christmas is the time of year when we busy ourselves consuming – I'm not talking about the office party but rather handing the plastic over during a mad dash to the shopping centre to get everyone a gift to open on the big day.

Stop for a moment... of the $50 billion that is spent by Australians on gifts around Christmas, approximately $700 million is expected to go to landfill by the following February. Will this include what you give? It's easy to get swept up in the festive season, but can you remember any of the presents you received last year?

Here's an idea: ask yourself if the person really needs what you are going to buy them. Then ask whether there's an alternative... something more useful that you could buy them.

Great tips to reduce the amount of landfill created by Christmas

  • Get your family to make a Christmas list. Yes, it does take out the element of surprise but it saves that 'cringe' moment where you have to pretend you love the lace and crochet soap cover from Nana (complete with a cake of imperial leather) = this means landfill!
  • Do a secret santa. Write down all of the names and everybody buys for one person. Set a price limit, drop hints and voila… you end up with one great item or experience not a load of cheap, unnecessary rubbish.
  • Give an experience. No wrapping or trudging around the chaotic shopping mall required. You can give memories.

Sharing time with loved ones

  • A family pass to the zoo or wildlife world
  • Organise an adventure like a train trip to the Blue Mountains or take a picnic and a ferry somewhere new

Acts of service – no packaging, no landfill, just time

  • Purchase a 2 hour cleaning service for a friend or family member, who doesn't want someone to Spring clean? Services like Airtasker offer a great selection of vetted people.
  • Offer your own time to babysit, clean, cook dinner, be the chef/waiter/kitchen hand for a dinner party at a friend's house.

Enrich mind and body

  • Teach a friend a new skill yourself or give a gift voucher to their local community college
  • Fitness studio membership
  • Sewing lessons or furniture restoration classes are a great opportunity to learn how to 'make do and mend' or up cycle
  • Opera House or local theatre memberships to provide some cultural enrichment and entertainment throughout the year
  • Cooking lessons – do they have a favourite cuisine or would they enjoy a food and wine tour of a particular region?
  • A spa treatment – ahhhh

Kids and all that STUFF!

Here are some tips to reducing the amount of STUFF that kids accumulate over the festive season.

  • Get them to make a list with 3 things on it. If there is something significant (expensive) ask others to contribute.
  • Adopt the policy of one thing in, one thing out. Reducing the amount of things you own helps you stay focused and organised.

What about something that doesn't come encased in masses of packaging, something like a gift of a service? If you're ecologically-minded then you will know that a service has a lower ecological footprint. You're not buying something that's been processed, manufactured and transported to the shops.

So, a service... what about a voucher for a massage, a music lesson, to learn a language or gym membership? Think of something that lasts all year, like an annual subscription to a magazine or carshare scheme.

Maybe, if you want to give something physical and lasting, a new commuter bicycle to start 2014 on the right foot... or pedal... would be the bees knees.

This approach is a little harder for kids, I don't mean the commuter bike (though what kid doesn't like bikes?), but rather thinking about better quality items that will last the test of time, keep them active and interested throughout the whole year, not just until Boxing Day.

If you are giving a gift think laterally and be creative about how you present it... you could wrap it in re-used paper like a section of the newspaper (without pictures works best or a foreign paper), an old map or film posters from the DVD shop, even your kids artwork.

In fact, the wrapping could actually be another gift like nice organic cotton tea towel.

The Story of Stuff

Still a little unsure? Then before you embark on your Christmas shopping list, take a few minutes to visit The Story of Stuff.

This is an excellent website with some illuminating presentations on where the products we buy actually come from.

12 Do's of Christmas this Festive season

Eastern Suburbs people frequently contact our councils for advice about ways to cut back on their waste at Christmas time, whether in the form of christmas wrapping, gifts or even decorations and food.

Randwick Council is supporting Planet Ark's 12 Do's of Christmas,  where you'll find tips you can take before and after Christmas.

Why not do our Eastern Suburbs environment a favour this Christmas and still have a very special and happy Christmas season?

How to consume less at Christmas

Christmas is the time of year when we busy ourselves consuming – I'm not talking about the office party but rather handing the plastic over during a mad dash to the shopping centre to get everyone a gift to open on the big day.

Stop for a moment... of the $50 billion that is spent by Australians on gifts around Christmas, approximately $700 million is expected to go to landfill by the following February. Will this include what you give? It's easy to get swept up in the festive season, but can you remember any of the presents you received last year?

Here's an idea: ask yourself if the person really needs what you are going to buy them. Then ask whether there's an alternative... something more useful that you could buy them.

Great tips to reduce the amount of landfill created by Christmas

  • Get your family to make a Christmas list. Yes, it does take out the element of surprise but it saves that 'cringe' moment where you have to pretend you love the lace and crochet soap cover from Nana (complete with a cake of imperial leather) = this means landfill!
  • Do a secret santa. Write down all of the names and everybody buys for one person. Set a price limit, drop hints and voila… you end up with one great item or experience not a load of cheap, unnecessary rubbish.
  • Give an experience. No wrapping or trudging around the chaotic shopping mall required. You can give memories.

Sharing time with loved ones

  • A family pass to the zoo or wildlife world
  • Organise an adventure like a train trip to the Blue Mountains or take a picnic and a ferry somewhere new

Acts of service – no packaging, no landfill, just time

  • Purchase a 2 hour cleaning service for a friend or family member, who doesn't want someone to Spring clean? Services like Airtasker offer a great selection of vetted people.
  • Offer your own time to babysit, clean, cook dinner, be the chef/waiter/kitchen hand for a dinner party at a friend's house.

Enrich mind and body

  • Teach a friend a new skill yourself or give a gift voucher to their local community college
  • Fitness studio membership
  • Sewing lessons or furniture restoration classes are a great opportunity to learn how to 'make do and mend' or up cycle
  • Opera House or local theatre memberships to provide some cultural enrichment and entertainment throughout the year
  • Cooking lessons – do they have a favourite cuisine or would they enjoy a food and wine tour of a particular region?
  • A spa treatment – ahhhh

Kids and all that STUFF!

Here are some tips to reducing the amount of STUFF that kids accumulate over the festive season.

  • Get them to make a list with 3 things on it. If there is something significant (expensive) ask others to contribute.
  • Adopt the policy of one thing in, one thing out. Reducing the amount of things you own helps you stay focused and organised.

What about something that doesn't come encased in masses of packaging, something like a gift of a service? If you're ecologically-minded then you will know that a service has a lower ecological footprint. You're not buying something that's been processed, manufactured and transported to the shops.

So, a service... what about a voucher for a massage, a music lesson, to learn a language or gym membership? Think of something that lasts all year, like an annual subscription to a magazine or carshare scheme.

Maybe, if you want to give something physical and lasting, a new commuter bicycle to start 2014 on the right foot... or pedal... would be the bees knees.

This approach is a little harder for kids, I don't mean the commuter bike (though what kid doesn't like bikes?), but rather thinking about better quality items that will last the test of time, keep them active and interested throughout the whole year, not just until Boxing Day.

If you are giving a gift think laterally and be creative about how you present it... you could wrap it in re-used paper like a section of the newspaper (without pictures works best or a foreign paper), an old map or film posters from the DVD shop, even your kids artwork.

In fact, the wrapping could actually be another gift like nice organic cotton tea towel.

12 Do's of Christmas this Festive season

Eastern Suburbs people frequently contact our councils for advice about ways to cut back on their waste at Christmas time, whether in the form of christmas wrapping, gifts or even decorations and food.

Randwick Council is supporting Planet Ark's 12 Do's of Christmas,  where you'll find tips you can take before and after Christmas.

Why not do our Eastern Suburbs environment a favour this Christmas and still have a very special and happy Christmas season?

The Story of Stuff

Still a little unsure? Then before you embark on your Christmas shopping list, take a few minutes to visit The Story of Stuff.

This is an excellent website with some illuminating presentations on where the products we buy actually come from.

Last Updated: 28 November 2023
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