
Siena Artisan Shops: Ceramics, Leather & Handcrafted Souvenirs
Skip the mass-produced magnets. Here is where to buy genuine Sienese craftsmanship — from hand-painted ceramics to leather bound journals — directly from the artisans.
Siena’s artisan tradition runs deeper than its tourist-trap souvenir stalls suggest. The city once supplied the papal court with textiles, ceramics, and illuminated manuscripts. Today, a handful of workshops keep those skills alive. Here is where to find genuine craftsmanship — and what to expect to pay.
Ceramics: La Cucina di Giuditta
On Via delle Sperandie, a small workshop produces hand-painted ceramics in the Sienese style — blue-and-white patterns with botanical motifs, plus bolder pieces in the "terra di Siena" ochre palette. Plates, bowls, and tiles are made on-site. You can watch the painter at work most mornings. A dinner plate costs 35 to 60 euros depending on complexity. They ship internationally.
Leather: Toscana Pelletterie
Near Piazza del Mercato, a family-run workshop makes leather journals, wallets, and bags using vegetable-tanned hides from the Santa Croce sull'Arno tanneries. The journals with hand-marbled paper covers are particularly beautiful. A medium journal costs 45 to 75 euros. Custom embossing takes 24 hours.
Textiles: Tessitura Senese
Siena’s textile tradition dates to the 13th century, when the city wove wool for all of Europe. Tessitura Senese on Via di Citta produces hand-woven scarves and throws on antique looms. The patterns are based on contrada flags and medieval designs. A silk-wool scarf runs 80 to 140 euros — expensive, but the quality is extraordinary.
Goldsmiths: Orafi della Torre
The Torre contrada has a centuries-old tradition of goldsmithing. Two workshops near Piazza del Duomo still make jewelry in the Renaissance tradition — filigree earrings, engraved pendants, and signet rings. Prices start around 120 euros for silver pieces and 300+ for gold.
What to Avoid
- "Made in Italy" leather goods sold near the Campo for 15 euros — these are imported from outside the EU.
- Ceramic shops with identical stock across multiple locations — the pieces are factory-made in Empoli or Deruta.
- "Tuscan" wine sold in decorative bottles — the wine is often low-quality bulk juice.
Our Budget Pick
If you want something authentic without the artisan price tag, buy a contrada scarf. Each of the 17 districts sells cotton scarves in its colors for 8 to 12 euros. They are machine-made but genuinely local, and wearing one in the right neighborhood earns smiles from residents.
Our advice: The best souvenir from Siena is not an object — it is a skill. Several workshops offer half-day classes in ceramic painting, leatherworking, or bookbinding. You leave with something you made, plus a story no factory souvenir can match.
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