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SUPREME SHOPPING
PARADISE
Thailand earned the title of
shopping paradise
long ago, and is now on its way to becoming the most popular destination
in Asia. The citys impressive shopping
grounds have a wealth of modern, multi-storeyed shopping
malls and department stores. Upmarket favourites include Central
World, Siam Paragon, Siam Discovery, The Emporium, Central Chidlom,
Gaysorn Bangkok and Erawan Bangkok.
These are where you will find the citys top fashion stores
with global brand names, and boutiques with every kind of luxury
lifestyle goods as well as bookshops, gourmet food outlets and special
attractions. Elegantly cool, air-conditioned and easy to navigate,
most complexes are accessible via the citys clean and reliable
BTS Skytrain
system.
Theres also another bargain-shopping
style in Bangkok at popular mass
market centres such as Mah Boon Krong, Platinum Fashion Mall, Bai
Yok and Pratunam market. The famous Chatuchak Weekend Market is
an open-air treasure cave packed with stalls with a dazzling array
of clothing, jewellery, antiques, furniture, books and pets.
In the city, Suan
Lum Night Bazaar opposite Lumphini Park on Rama IV Road hits
all the tourist buttons with its colourful array of shopping,
entertainment and dining outlets. Visitors can stroll safely between
rows of shops selling everything from fashions and accessories,
handicrafts, clothes, ornaments, toys and snacks to suit everyones
taste and pocket.
Every year in June, the Tourism Authority of Thailand
(TAT) organises Thailand Grand
Sales providing visitors with opportunities to shop for well-known
brands of clothing, jewellery, leatherwear, bags, shoes and more
at special promotional prices, as well as export quality products
from the Royal Projects.
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SHOPPING
FOR THAI PRODUCTS
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A
wealth of shopping opportunities
awaits visitors to Thailand. The
shopping experience itself is
a pleasure as one ventures from upscale shopping
malls and department stores to high street shops, back street stalls
and bustling markets. Supreme among Thailands
own native products are its handicrafts made in both traditional
and contemporary styles. Many of the hand-made objects were originally
created for temples and palaces or for practical purposes in the
home. Nowadays, reproductions of these traditional items have become
coveted keepsakes for visitors and collectors from around the world.
Some of the products for which Thailand
is renowned are handwoven silks and cotton, woodcarvings, lacquerware,
ceramics, metal-ware, gems and jewellery. Each of the countrys
76 provinces has traditionally specialised in products native to
the locality or to individual communities. Chiang
Mai in the North has the reputation for the finest lacquerware
and woodcarvings, the southern city of Nakhon
Si Thammarat is famous for its nielloware, and Sukhothai-Si
Satchanalai in the Central Plains is renowned of its green celadon
pottery.
Today, Thai style harmoniously blends Eastern spirituality with
Western sophistication and technology. Thailands
heritage of diverse skills such as the gold-leaf stencilling originally
applied to decorate temple doors and intricate rattan weaving originally
to make baskets for farmers or fishermen are reinterpreted in a
21st century context. Modern recreations of traditional Thai household
objects live on as elegant design elements in hotels,
resorts, restaurants,
office building and private homes all over the world.
Here are some of the local products popular with visitors to
Thailand:
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Silk & Cotton: Thai hand-woven
silks are already well known around the world thanks
to Jim Thompson, the Support Foundation of Her Majesty
Queen Sirikit and the many small factories that support
the continuing existence of traditional weaving and
dyeing techniques. Thai silk is dyed in an astounding
range of colours and a variety of weaves, widths and
textures suitable for everything from glamorous evening
gowns and stoles to stylish mens shirts and scarves,
quilts, curtains and cushions.
Homespun cotton, light and comfortable
has been an ideal material for clothing in warm climates
since the first civilisations. Thai cotton naturally
dyed in a brilliant variety of colours is beginning
to rival silk in its worldwide popularity, and makes
a wonderful range of home furnishings, bedspreads, throw
rugs and napkins. Hand-made bags in traditional and
contemporary designs from the North of Thailand
are a popular buy, and woven Thai hemp cloth with its
linen-like texture is a fashion trend to watch.
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Art & Antiques: Bangkok
is a major trade centre for Thai and Asian antiques, with its focus
near the river along Charoen
Krung Road near the Chao Phraya River. River City is an art
and antique emporium with more than 100 shops selling genuine antiques
and reproductions, Thai craft products, jewellery, home decorative
items, paintings and art objects of all kinds. Oriental Place next
to The
Oriental Hotel, displays more exclusive antiques and art and
artworks. On lower Silom Road,
the multi-storey Silom Galleria
also specialises in art and antiques.
Custom
Tailoring: There are hundreds of tailors shops in Bangkok
ready to make suits in a variety of styles in a few days for a low
price. Customers usually select a style from one of the fashion
magazines in the store. There is a large concentration of tourist-oriented
tailors shops along Sukhumvit
Road between Soi 3 and Soi 15 near Nana BTS
Skytrain station, and there are many in the shopping
arcades. The more upmarket tailors are to be found along Charoen
Krung Road near the top hotels
and in the hotels arcades.
Woodcraft: Chiang
Mai has been the commercial centre of woodcraft in northern
Thailand for decades. From the
wooden elephants initially the most popular souvenir items, craftsmen
have introduced an enormous variety of designs featuring mythical
angels, dancers, animals and reproductions of architectural details
from palaces and temples. Apart from Chiang
Mai, there are many woodcraft shops to be found in Bangkoks
shopping malls and department
stores.
Ceramics
& Pottery: The first pottery known to mankind is thought
have been made in what is now Northeast Thailand,
but classic Thai ceramics were influenced by Chinese traditions,
like the 14th century hand-painted Sangkhalok made in Sukhothai
and the 19th century Bencharong with decorative porcelain bowls
and jars glazed with five colours. The northeastern community of
Dan Kwian in Nakhon Ratchasima
Province produces attractive bowls, vases, flower containers and
ornamental accessories large and small from the distinctive, local
rust-red clay. Ceramics and pottery are readily available in Bangkok
at speciality outlets, again in leading shopping
malls and department stores.
Metal: The Thai goldsmiths were
famous for their skill, and the tradition of fine work has made
gold an important export commodity for Thailand.
The ancient art of gold stencilling and the application of gold
leaf are ancient crafts that live in new forms and designs today.
Silver is beaten to make ornate trays, bowls and boxes and delicately
crafted ornaments. Beaten copper has become highly valued for interiordecoration
and bronze for the making of lifelike statuary. The craftsmen of
the northern provinces have the reputation for the finest work in
gold and silver.
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Gems
& Jewellery: The skill and craftsmanship
of local designers, have made Thailand
one of the worlds leading exporters of jewellery.
Gem centres in Bangkok
offer Thailands
own rubies and sapphires and imported gems expertly
cut and fashioned into high-quality jewellery. Thailands
distinctive 24-carat gold, available in the many gold
shops traditionally decorated in red and white, is prized
for its unique colour and style. More modern designs
can be found in standalone shops within major department
stores. Bangkoks
gem district is in Silom
and Surawong roads and Charoen
Krung (New Road) and there are numerous shops in
the multi-storey Jewellery Trade Centre and Silom
Galleria, both on Silom
Road.
To ensure buyers of fair prices and value
for money, the Thai Gems & Jewelry Traders Association
and the Tourism Authority of Thailand
formed the Jewel Fest Club, a non-profit organisation
whose members offer quality products at reasonable prices
with a money back guarantee if shoppers are not satisfied
with their purchase. When buying jewellery, it is always
advisable to look for shops with the JFC emblem.
- Jewel Fest Club, Jewellery Trade Centre, 52nd floor,
Silom Road, Bangkok
10500. Tel: 0 2630 1390-7 ext 125. Fax: 0 2630 1398-9.
jewelfestclub@ jewelfest.com or tgjta@mozart.inet.co.
th. www.thaigemjewelry.or.th. For complaints concerning
purchases of gems and jewellery, please contact the
Tourist Police Division. Tel: 1155 or Tel: 0 2281
5051 (662 281 5051 from outside Thailand).
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OTOP
Products: OTOP stands for One Tambon One Product,
a government scheme whereby handicrafts made by village
communities (tambon) can be marketed and sold to improve
the communitys income. OTOP products are those
items made traditionally in a specific area or village
representing local craft traditions. They may be pottery,
furniture, cotton or silk garments, fashion accessories,
household items practical and decorative and many other
articles indigenous to each community. The essential
ingredient is they are all handmade with skill, and
reflect the uniqueness of their localities. OTOP products
are now firmly present in the both the domestic and
international marketplace, and the OTOP logo is recognised
as a symbol of quality.
At present, there are more than 8,000
products in the OTOP special collections category. They
include brass, silver and lacquer, woodcarvings, pottery
and porcelain, leather goods, woven bamboo and rattan
baskets handwoven fabrics, artificial flowers, dolls
and khon masks, scented candles, mulberry and pineapple
paper products, model boats and many more.
- The main Bangkok
OTOP shop is at the Thailand
Export Mart Building, 6th floor, Ratchadaphisek Road,
Bangkok 10900. Tel:
(662) 511 5279-84. Fax: (662) 511 5081. It is open
Monday to Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and 9 a.m.
to 6 p.m. on Saturday. It is closed on Sundays and
public holidays, For more information, visit www.thaitambon.
com/otopcollections.
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