When:
April 28, 2024 @ 10:00 am – 5:00 pm
2024-04-28T10:00:00-04:00
2024-04-28T17:00:00-04:00
Where:
Folk Art Center
milepost 382 on the Blue Ridge Parkway
Asheville NC
Cost:
Free
Contact:
Folk Art Center
(828) 298-7928
See the Cultivation of the Crafts and Makers of the Southern Highlands @ Folk Art Center

Sundays: 10:00am-5:00pm

Mondays: 10:00am-5:00pm

Tuesdays: 10:00am-5:00pm

Wednesdays: 10:00am-5:00pm

Thursdays: 10:00am-5:00pm

Fridays: 10:00am-5:00pm

Saturdays: 10:00am-5:00pm

The Folk Art Center is a museum of Appalachian arts and crafts located at milepost 382 on the Blue Ridge Parkway near Asheville, North Carolina. It also houses offices for three separate Parkway partners: the Southern Highland Craft Guild, the National Park Service, and Eastern National (known as EN).The Center, a cooperative effort between the Southern Highland Craft Guild, the National Park Service, and the Appalachian Regional Commission, features many one-of-a-kind handmade crafts and is the most popular attraction on the Parkway, seeing a quarter of a million visitors per year.Opened to the public at its current location in 1980, the Center contains three galleries, a library, and an auditorium, and also houses the Eastern National bookstore and information center.

Admission is free.

One of the Center’s main attractions is the Guild’s century-old Allanstand Craft Shop, changing exhibitions in galleries from its permanent collection of 3,500 pieces of craft objects dating back to the turn of the 20th century. The Center also features an exhibition of traditional and contemporary southern Appalachian crafts.HistoryFrances Goodrich, a Yale graduate, moved to the Asheville, North Carolina area in 1890 to do missionary work for the local Presbyterian Church. She found a few women who were still weaving traditional coverlets in wool and cotton. Goodrich was then inspired with the idea of a cottage industry that would assist mountain families. She founded Allanstand Cottage Industries in 1897 in Madison County, North Carolina. This ultimately became Allanstand Craft Shop. She then moved the business to downtown Asheville in 1908 and from her College Street headquarters she worked with other leaders of the southern Arts and Crafts movement.