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Home / Insider Blogs / Food & Hidden Gems / Bellingham’s Makeworth Market a Welcoming Place to Chill

Bellingham’s Makeworth Market a Welcoming Place to Chill

By Lauren Kramer / July 29, 2019

There’s a delicious, light-filled, airy new restaurant on Chestnut and State in Bellingham that’s making waves among coffee aficionados, locals who want a spacious, communal space where they can work uninterrupted for hours, and lovers of good, simple, honest food. Makeworth Market, a 4,700-square-foot eatery, had been a dream of Corey Silversmith for three decades before it finally opened May 1, 2019.


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The building, formerly occupied by a clothing store and a series of small cafes, underwent eight months of renovation during which plaster was removed to expose brick walls, the honey-colored hardwood floors were sanded and refinished and the partition that had once divided the building was removed. The result is 20-foot ceilings in a large open, white-themed space where diners can sit window-side and sip their lattes or grab a table without feeling in any way claustrophic. Décor is modern, rustic and Scandinavian and pendant lights hang in the windows. If there’s one key word in this restaurant, it’s spacious. Thanks to its size, Makeworth Market never feels crowded.


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Silversmith, previously in customer service, moved to Bellingham from San Diego three years ago and partnered with KJ Plank, Michael Borden and Mike Gaetke to bring MakeWorth to reality. His food menu features five varieties of gourmet toast ($6-$13) so if you’re hungry there’s plenty to choose from. Sweet-toothed patrons will love the almond butter and banana toast or the cream cheese and slow-roasted strawberry jam, while savory fans will prefer the burrata and tomato or the avocado with pickled onion. All are served on red and white wheat bread made by Sophie Williams of Raven Breads. The sweet confections, which include scones and a rotating selection of cakes by Sarah Woods of Gather Confections, include the decadent, multi-tiered brown butter cake with slow roasted strawberries, malted chocolate caramel cake and the vegan chocolate tea cake.


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We ordered the not-too-sweet honey lavender latte ($5.50), a Makeworth specialty that’s a perfect antidote to a hot day. Breakfast time had come and gone so I was glad to sink my teeth into the burrata & tomato toast, an artistic looking combination of fresh pesto, burrata cheese, tomatoes and a drizzled balsamic vinegar reduction. With just the right amount of crunch, the peasant-style wheat bread is thick and satisfying, and its savory toppings combine effortlessly to create a beautiful snack or light meal.


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Silversmith met his wife in a café and loves how cafes, his own included, bring people together to socialize or work in a communal space. “Part of why I was so interested in cafes from an early age is precisely that they bring people together – friends reconnecting, people falling  in love,” he reflected. “Our goal at Makeworth Market was to have a large space that allowed a mixed demographic of people, all of whom could feel immediately at home.”


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    The desert selection at Makeworth is as decadent as it is eye-catching.

He’s certainly accomplished his goal. This is a space that makes you want to pull up a chair in the sunlight and dive into a good book, or open your laptop and bury yourself in work in a friendly, interesting environment, or meet friends and catch up over a healthy salad (chopped kale with chicken topping or spring house salad – $9-$10). No-one will rush you to evacuate a table here because one of Silversmith’s founding principles for MakeWorth is that it be a home away from home.

Inside, Silversmith and his partners are keeping things interesting. A mural was recently painted on the back wall by local watercolor artist Quinn Dimitroff, whose framed work is also for sale. In the future, a rotating series of artists’ work will be featured on the walls. Retail items include bags, jeans and pottery by Addie Yake, as well as skin products by Herbivore and Herb Essentials.


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“Retail items include bags, jeans and pottery by Addie Yake, as well as skin products by Herbivore and Herb Essentials.”

The long opening hours – 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday and 8 a.m. through 9 p.m. on weekends – will be extended in the Fall and the menu will expand too. Silversmith is just getting started at MakeWorth Market and has lots of ideas in the pipeline. Look out for the grab-and-go breakfast sandwiches that will debut soon, and try the coffee selection, which features the full spectrum of favorites from macchiato to cortado, latte to mocha and London fog tea to a basic jasmine green.


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Silversmith at Makeworth Market.

“This transition is very exciting for me and it’s exceeding my expectations in every way,” Silversmith confessed. “This is just the beginning!”


If You Go:

  • MakeWorth Market is located at 1201 N. State Street Bellingham
  • www.makeworthmarket.com
  • Instagram: MakeWorthMarket

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Filed Under: Food & Hidden Gems, Insider Blogs Tagged With: Coffee Shops in Bellingham, Downtown Bellingham, New Spots in Bellingham, Things to do in Bellingham, things to do in downtown Bellingham wa, things to do in Whatcom County

About Lauren Kramer

With one foot in Richmond, BC and the other planted firmly in Bellingham, WA Lauren Kramer is an award-winning writer and mother with a passion for the Pacific Northwest's unique offerings.

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Visitor Center Located at I-5 Exit 253
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