Others, including Tickled Pink, Quichua World Market, Canada in a Basket and Adaawewigamig, aren’t food vendors, but they have been part of the fabric of what a public market is supposed to be. They’re the places where people browse, linger and discover something unexpected. They’ve endured the good times and bad, the busy seasons and slow ones. They’re employers, providing a living not just for their own families, but for others as well.