Ken Market

By Caldwell
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Kensington Market used to sit at 49–53 Kensington High Street, a three-storey indoor maze of stalls and dreams. Between the ages of 16 and 18—1988 to 1990, back when London still had places like that—I used to go there alone, working hard at building up my Goth credentials.
I bought a pair of winkle-pickers so long and pointed they made my stick-thin drainpipe legs look like they ended in black arrows. I spent what felt like hours—but was probably just angsty minutes—talking to tattoo artists I was too nervous to actually book time with. I hung around the stalls admiring Teddy Boys in fat loafers and chequered jackets, listening (incongruously) to Black Uhuru. It all felt thrilling and dangerous and deeply important. Somewhere between My Beautiful Laundrette and DEF II.
It's funny to think now: even though I believed I was ducking the mainstream, slipping into the darkened alleys of the undefinable, the BBC had already nailed it—had nailed me. The BBC! About as cutting edge as a packet of Digestives and a cup of PG Tips.
Patchouli was everywhere.
Eventually, in the basement of Kensington Market—dark, slightly damp, smelling of disinfectant and burnt toast—I decided to get a tattoo. I chose the Eye of Horus. It felt ancient, mystical, powerful. A secret symbol. Mine.
The market’s gone now. Torn down, paved over, turned into something cleaner and sadder. And the tattoo’s gone too. I had it lasered off a few years back—not because I stopped believing in ancient magic, but because The Sisters of Mercy used the Eye of Horus on one of their album covers not long after I'd had it done. From then on, everyone assumed I was just a huge Sisters fan. Which would have been fine, except I wasn't.
I liked them well enough. But there was something about the image they built that felt... well, a bit pantomime. Black aviator glasses, standing in the rain in oversized leather jackets, trying very hard to look like they didn’t care. I doubted Andrew Eldritch even owned a motorbike. He was more into abandoned warehouses and piles of twisted metal. It was all a bit too... meh.
Still, for a while, I had a symbol inked into me that felt like it was mine. A secret mark from a time and a place that, like Kensington Market itself, has long since disappeared.
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Comments
It's been demolished???? That
It's been demolished???? That's such a shame. I wonder if there's still a faint whiff of patchouli (or weed) when you walk past. Thank you for this lovely memory Caldwell which brought back some of my own earlier ones of the same place. I am guessing they'd got rid of the smelly afghan coats by the tine you went?
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I think they spanned a good
I think they spanned a good few years (the coats) at least they were on sale at Kensington Market long after most people stopped wearing them. The film I hope will live forever!
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Another market that's struggling
is the Caledonian antiques market. I used to love wandering around it during my lunch break when I worked in Bermonsey. I couldn't afford to buy stuff as I was still studying but they were some lovely things.I particulary remembered a beautiful chess set, a real bargain, but out of my price range. Locals told me the best time to go for bargains was between 2 and 5am. Back then (before 1995 when they took away Marché ouvert) you could legally buy stolen goods displayed on the stalls.
I didn't know Kensington market There was a pretty good one in Greenwich, but I don't know if it still operates. Didn't rate Portobello Road too many grockles. Camberwell was OK, expensive though.
Of course as a kid I was frequently dragged around Woowich market by Mum and Dad or my Gran for weekly food. Maybe that's why I never really got turned on by markets.
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I remember Bermondsey Market
I remember Bermondsey Market Ed - what a place! When I was about 14/15, a friend's father who was an antique dealer sometimes took us with him there - very very early as you say, and fascinating to walk round - also as you say, full of extremely dodgy things (and people)
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