We bring weekend-market energy online: pottery, jewelry, textiles, décor, preserves, bakes, and small-batch treats from independent makers you can actually get to know.
Craftalot started with a simple belief: people want to buy real things from real people. South Africa has vibrant craft markets, farm stalls, and neighbourhood makers — but discovery and trust shouldn't depend on being in the right place at the right Saturday morning.
We built Craftalot as a curated marketplace where makers list handmade goods and artisan food with clear photos, honest descriptions, and fair representation. Shoppers can browse by department, search for gifts, join group or event windows, and support small producers from across the country.
Based in Kempton Park with roots in Gauteng, we focus on practical tools for sellers (stock, variants, SEO-friendly product pages) and a calm shopping experience for buyers — so the work shines, not the clutter.
To make it easier for South Africans to discover and buy handmade and artisan products while giving makers a serious storefront — not just a single link in a bio. We care about craft quality, transparent listings, and community.
Ceramics, jewelry, textiles, décor, gifts, and more — sold by the people who make them. Listings support variants, clear imagery, and optional SEO titles and slugs so Google can understand each product.
Preserves, sauces, bakes, drinks, and other pantry treats from small producers. We encourage accurate descriptions and realistic fulfilment so buyers know what to expect when ordering food online.
Craftalot is online-first and serves shoppers across South Africa; delivery and collection options depend on each seller and are shown on product pages.
Browse departments and filters designed for handmade and food — not generic megamall categories.
Support independent sellers with transparent listings and stories you can follow on the blog.
Find pieces and pantry treats that read as thoughtful — because they are.
Start with new arrivals, ready-to-ship items, or your favourite department — and check the blog for maker interviews and seasonal guides.