Honoring the hands that shape this place

We partner with makers across New Hampshire and New England whose work reflects the seasons, materials, and character of this region.

From ceramicists and candle makers to tea blenders and small-batch producers, each collection is built on craft, care, and a shared respect for place.

We choose partners who value care over speed, materials over trends, and work meant to be used and lived with.

Camp Candles

Westford, MA and Ossipee, NH

Mandi founded Camp Candles in 2020 with a specific idea: candles that smell like being outside in New England. She works in Westford, Massachusetts, but her reference points are the seasons and landscapes shared across this whole region — the trail you ski in February, the lake at first light, the porch in late August before the summer ends. Earth-friendly ingredients, sustainable packaging. Each scent is its own particular kind of place.

Joy Lane Farm

Rollinsford, NH

Joel and Katy are second-generation soap-makers working out of a classic New England mill in Rollinsford, a small Seacoast town near the Maine border. The craft came from Joel's mother, who passed it to them when she left to serve overseas — which means every bar carries some of that original intention forward. Their goat milk soap is made in small batches, in scents that stay close to what New England actually smells like: lavender, eucalyptus mint, lilac in early spring.

Lucas Roasting Company

Wolfeboro, NH

Lucas Roasting has been roasting coffee in Wolfeboro long enough to become part of the town's character — a Lakes Region fixture in a place that knows the difference between good coffee and great coffee. They roast in small batches and ship quickly, because the gap between the roaster and your cup matters to them in a way it doesn't at most operations. Freshness isn't a claim here. It's the method.

White Mountain Apiary and Bee Farm

Whitefield, NH

Raw honey and beeswax candles from the shadow of the White Mountains. The honey is unfiltered and shifts with the season — what the bees find is what you get, which means no two harvests are quite the same. The beeswax candles are made from the same hives: clean-burning, long-lasting, the product of the same landscape that produced the honey. Here, the source and the thing made from it are genuinely inseparable.

Wilbur Woodworking

Rochester, NH

Brad learned to work wood the way most lasting skills are learned — from someone who came before him. His coasters are cut and finished with the kind of attention that shows up as clean grain, smooth edge, and years of use without wear. Generational craft doesn't announce itself. It just holds up.

North Family Farms

Canterbury, NH

North Family Farm makes maple syrup in New Hampshire, where the sugaring season is short and the weather is the variable no one controls. They tap their trees each year and work the sap through the process that turns a narrow window of cold nights and warm days into something you'll reach for long after that window closes. The season determines the yield. The farm does the rest.

Sewohva

Bow, NH

Rachel makes beeswax food wraps by hand in Bow, NH — the kind of practical, beautiful thing that earns a permanent place in your kitchen once you've used it. She sells primarily at craft fairs, which means her work spreads the way the best things do: in person, by recommendation, one conversation at a time. The wraps are made to replace plastic, built to last, and carry the particular satisfaction of something made carefully and used every day.

Bog Mountain Pottery

Wilmot, NH

Chris and Alyce grew up together in Pennsylvania, built a pottery studio there, and eventually found their way to Wilmot — a small town tucked against the hills of western New Hampshire. The stoneware mugs they make here are hand-thrown and built for daily use, the kind you reach for without thinking because they feel right in your hand. They brought the craft with them. The place did the rest.

A Vintage Wren Custom Furniture

Goffstown, NH

Justin and Jen make things out of wood that hold their shape — and their meaning — long after the occasion that prompted the gift. Their loon cutting board, designed exclusively for Lakes & Peaks, is specific to this place: the loon is New Hampshire's call, the sound that carries across the water before you see where it's coming from. The candle holders carry the same quality as the cutting board. Unhurried. Exact. Made to be kept.

Indus Design Co.

Loudon, NH

Indus Design Co. is a graphic and web design studio offering marketing collateral rooted in strategy, clarity, and craft. Inspired by a small-and-mighty spirit, they help businesses communicate clearly, confidently, and with purpose—through marketing collateral that truly supports growth.