A 6,000-square-foot multi-dealer antique marketplace in Midtown, Apple Tree Antique Gallery houses roughly 60 independent vendors selling furniture, vintage home décor, collectibles, and decorative arts under one roof. Unlike single-owner galleries focused on a curator's aesthetic, Apple Tree functions as a rotating bazaar where inventory and pricing shift with vendor participation, making repeat visits necessary to spot specific pieces.
The gallery occupies a converted warehouse space and operates as a cooperative where individual dealers lease booth space and stock their own merchandise. Visitors browse booths organized by vendor rather than by object type, so a single trip might span mid-century modern lamps, Depression glass, industrial salvage, hand-painted ceramics, and Victorian-era furnishings in adjacent stalls. The space attracts local estate liquidators, interior designers seeking one-of-a-kind pieces, and casual browsers looking for affordable decor without the design-forward markup of Midtown's newer antique and vintage shops.
Entry is free. Individual items range from under $10 for small glassware or vintage ephemera to several hundred dollars for signed furniture pieces or rare collectibles. Vendors set their own prices, which means the same category of object (a wooden side table, for example) may carry vastly different tags depending on the dealer's sourcing cost and target market. Some booths emphasize volume and low price; others specialize in authenticated vintage or period-specific pieces at higher points. Negotiation on large purchases is common practice, especially if buying multiple items from a single vendor.
The Paseo Arts District's single-owner galleries and artist cooperatives like Tower Theatre and nearby studios typically feature contemporary local art or curated vintage collections reflecting the owner's taste. Apple Tree's multi-dealer model offers wider price ranges and faster inventory turnover, though less curatorial consistency. For buyers seeking a predictable aesthetic and expertise, Paseo galleries are stronger; for those chasing a specific vintage find or willing to explore surprises, Apple Tree's volume and dealer diversity reward patience. Stockyard City's larger antique malls follow a similar booth-rental model but skew toward Western Americana and ranch décor, whereas Apple Tree draws a broader cross-section of Americana, midcentury, and decorative categories.
Apple Tree works well for decorators sourcing affordable fill pieces, collectors hunting specific vintage categories (Depression glass, mid-century kitchenware, industrial hardware), and estate-sale shoppers accustomed to variable quality and pricing. Browsers looking for a visually unified shopping experience or a specific designer style will find the mixed-booth layout scattered; serious collectors may prefer the vetted, transparent pricing of single-dealer shops. First-time visitors expecting museum-quality presentation should reset expectations; booths vary in organization and cleanliness.
Plan 45 minutes to an hour to explore the full floor. Inventory is dense but not labeled by category, so movement is intuitive but not efficient if hunting something specific. Many vendors staff their booths during peak hours (weekends, afternoons) and are willing to discuss provenance, pricing flexibility, or special orders. Photography is generally permitted; confirm with individual vendors if interested in specific pieces. The space can be warm in summer and cool in winter, and aisles are narrow, making crowded weekend afternoons slower.
Hours are typically 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday; Monday is closed (verify current hours before visiting, as vendor participation and staffing affect operating schedule). Free off-street parking is available on-site. The Midtown location places Apple Tree within walking distance of other antique and vintage retailers, making it a logical stop on a larger shopping trip. The building is one story with level entry, and the concrete floors and warehouse scale make it wheelchair-accessible, though aisles between booths are tight.
Apple Tree's appeal lies in its low-barrier entry and the constant possibility of finding something unexpected at a price point unavailable elsewhere. For Oklahoma City shoppers building eclectic interiors or scouting for specific vintage categories, the dealer mill format justifies the trade-off between curation and volume.
