Native Max

Native Max Native Max is more than just a magazine. It's a movement. and Canada and beyond.

Native Max Magazine is a bi-monthly publication and first Native fashion magazine which features positive stories of the Native American and First Nations people. Focused on indigenous people, places and cultures with the same sleek presentation found in fashion magazines,

Native Max Magazine was created due to the lack of positive representation of Native people in the mainstream media, especia

lly in the fashion industries. Now possessing an online version of the magazine, popular website, tv network, and strong social media presence, Native Max continues to be a positive movement of promoting talented Native individuals, businesses, organizations, projects, and developments of the U.S.

Karuk designer Marcie Bain called it a comeback. Her adult kids, who grew up watching her create, called it a continuati...
06/04/2026

Karuk designer Marcie Bain called it a comeback. Her adult kids, who grew up watching her create, called it a continuation.

This is slow fashion, which Marcie has done before. Check out this throwback of her earliest looks, published in Native Max Magazine almost ten years ago.

One of the beloved stories in the California Indian Dreamin' issue 🌿

πŸ“– Read free β†’ https://bit.ly/3PepDQb
πŸ–¨οΈ Hold it in print β†’ https://bit.ly/3P6Ysab

"This is what dreaming looks like when it has roots."That's the line that wrote this issue.Every story inside the Califo...
06/04/2026

"This is what dreaming looks like when it has roots."

That's the line that wrote this issue.

Every story inside the California Indian Dreamin' issue, every artist, every museum, every garment, every family, came back to this. What does it mean to dream inside a living inheritance?

πŸ“– Read free β†’ https://bit.ly/3PepDQb
πŸ–¨οΈ Own the print β†’ https://bit.ly/3P6Ysab



Photo: CIMCC Executive Director Nicole Myers-Lim

A mother who taught her daughter. A daughter who curated an exhibition to honor her. 🀍 Intertwined: Returning to Our Roo...
06/02/2026

A mother who taught her daughter. A daughter who curated an exhibition to honor her. 🀍 Intertwined: Returning to Our Roots celebrates master weaver Jennie Wheeler, her students NaawΓ©iyaa, Rochelle Smallwood, Karrina Bell, Janie Jensen, Joshua James, and Jennifer Younger, and 30 years of keeping Tlingit tradition alive. Opens June 5 in Juneau. Read the story β†’ https://nativemaxmagazine.com/intertwined-returning-to-our-roots/

DEADLINE'S TOMORROW! Albuquerque designer The Son of Picasso grew up in the International District, "The Warzone," and n...
06/02/2026

DEADLINE'S TOMORROW! Albuquerque designer The Son of Picasso grew up in the International District, "The Warzone," and now he's bringing city-funded fashion workshops back to the neighborhood that raised him. This fall, his mentees will walk their own original looks at Civic Plaza in front of City Hall. We talked to him about what this milestone means, why denim is his medium, and what he wants young New Mexico creatives to know before CAMP 2.0 applications close tomorrow. Full story: https://nativemaxmagazine.com/your-zip-code-isnt-your-ceiling-benjamin-on-bringing-city-funded-fashion-to-albuquerques-international-district/



Photo: TRAVNOTSCOTT

She wore a beaded garment on a stage no one built for her. So she built it herself. 🌿Shoshoni Hostler's wearable art is ...
06/01/2026

She wore a beaded garment on a stage no one built for her. So she built it herself. 🌿

Shoshoni Hostler's wearable art is in the California Indian Dreamin' issue, and it will change the way you think about fashion, sovereignty, and what it means to dress with intention.

πŸ“– Read the full story free β†’ https://bit.ly/3PepDQb
πŸ–¨οΈ Own the print β†’ https://bit.ly/3P6Ysab



Model: Jayden Lim; designs by Shoshoni Hostler

πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆπŸ³οΈβ€βš§οΈ Happy Pride! This month, and every month, we celebrate and uplift our two-spirit relatives near and far. Here ...
06/01/2026

πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆπŸ³οΈβ€βš§οΈ Happy Pride! This month, and every month, we celebrate and uplift our two-spirit relatives near and far. Here are five things to know about two-spirit individuals:

✨ 1. The term "Two-Spirit" emerged in the early 1990s, but the identity itself has been recognized and honored within Indigenous communities for centuries.
✨ 2. Two-spirit is not a single, universal definition; its meaning is nation-specific, rooted in the unique traditions and languages of each community.
✨ 3. Historically, two-spirit people were regarded as sacred and divine, held in deep respect within the nations that recognized them.
✨ 4. Two-spirit individuals often held vital roles in their communities: as matchmakers, medicine people, and warriors on the front lines of battle.
✨ 5. Native Max Magazine is proudly two-spirit and LGBTQIA+ inclusive, in the stories we tell and the people who help us tell them. 🌈

Love and support to all two-spirit and LGBTQIA+ relatives this Pride Month and beyond. πŸ’›

For 30 years, Jennie Wheeler has been weaving tradition into her village of Yakutat, Alaska, and into the hands of her s...
06/01/2026

For 30 years, Jennie Wheeler has been weaving tradition into her village of Yakutat, Alaska, and into the hands of her students. Now her daughter, artist and curator Jennifer Younger, and the circle of artists she's inspired are bringing that legacy to Juneau. 🌿 Intertwined: Returning to Our Roots opens June 5 at T&H Áan Hít. Full story: https://nativemaxmagazine.com/intertwined-returning-to-our-roots/

"Your zip code isn't your ceiling." βœ‚οΈ Designer Benjamin AKA The Son of Picasso just made history, securing the first Ci...
06/01/2026

"Your zip code isn't your ceiling." βœ‚οΈ Designer Benjamin AKA The Son of Picasso just made history, securing the first City of Albuquerque-funded fashion initiative of its kind: two public runway shows and paid workshops in the International District with students debuting their own looks at Civic Plaza in November. We sat down with him ahead of CAMP 2.0's June 3rd deadline. Read the story here: https://nativemaxmagazine.com/your-zip-code-isnt-your-ceiling-benjamin-on-bringing-city-funded-fashion-to-albuquerques-international-district/



Photo: Erin LaMere/Rezolution Photography

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