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Segment I: SHOPPERS AHOY! The joyous shopper's
guide to India's rich and versatile shopping experience!
How you can enhance your Indian shopping experience with
smart, pocket-friendly and unique souvenirs: A Travelmartindia.com
exclusive for our honored tour guests- and also those wanting
a taste of good life-the Travelmartindia.com way: regal, comfortable
and completely customized to your needs!
Why do you need a Happy Shopper's Guide to India? Well, to
begin with, we give you the local expert's view on how best
to experience Indian shopping delights like none other in
the world! With years of tourism experience on how foreign
tourists can avoid being fleeced by many unauthorized traders
and having extensive knowledge of authentic Indian products
and the regions that are best known fore each, thanks to wide
networking between guides, operators and manufacturers, Travelmartindia
steers you towards Indian souvenirs that are reasonable and
unforgettably native to India.
A
brief history about uniquely Indian products: what you are
shopping for may have a story to tell too.
Many of the Indian arts and crafts consist of skills that
were originally passed down from father to son (remember that
ancient Indian was predominantly a patriarchal society, therefore
the emphasis on the son learning the trade; however, certain
skills were imparted to the womenfolk as well) and remained
in the family for centuries-much akin to the guild system
in Europe. These traditions and techniques were unique to
each crafter's community depending largely on the place of
origin i.e. Eastern India had cotton embroidery and block
printed fabrics with jute products also made with typical
designs while Western India counterparts of a weaver's family
would use different colors and motifs that reflected lifestyles
and possibly religious figures exclusive to their customary
delineations of the same.
Thus, while the loss of enthusiasm and perhaps, partly even
lack of talent on the part of youngsters in a craftsman's
family, led to them teaching the skills to those outside the
home-community, many ancient Indian crafts have died a natural
death for want of patronage and skilled artisans to carry
them forth.
The ones that have remained to date have governmental and
privatized firm efforts to thank for their survival along
with the raised levels of awareness by the tourism, trade
and commerce industries in India, which have brought the indigenous
products glory and fame by showcasing them before foreign
benefactors that appreciate the uniqueness and worth of the
workmanship.
Some of these distinctively regional Indian products that
most of our foreign guests have reported as being top favorites
are included in our guide segment below with details on their
variety and places of availability, just for you. Each Indian
town has its own specialties with skilled local craftsmen
that contribute to making quality Indian products a benchmark
for antique skills that blend modern aesthetics to bring you
the experience of exotic, majestic and mystical India: India
as it was centuries ago, India as it is for wide-eyed wanderers
today and the India that shines in hope for the days to come.
A glorious assortment of Indian fabrics such as brocades
and silks, spices, gold ornaments and silverware, carpets,
sculptures, antique wood-worked furniture and gift items,
marble and sandstone carvings - reasonable prices at state-run
emporiums and other shopping opportunities for you in weekly
local bazaars and established shopping zones in Indian cities
are covered in the next segment.
Segment II: All aboard for Indian shores! The Land where
the Sun never sets on the Shopping -incredible, enticing,
fascinating, fun, affordable and exclusive - experience the
India that you want it to be, and more!
Indulge in friendly road-side shopping bargains for souvenirs
or enter the professionally managed and fixed rates of state-emporiums
for Indian keepsakes and grander purchases that have a timeless
grace and uniquely Indian flavor!
From best bargains and hassle-free shop-till-you-drop tips
about places, style-buys and products exclusively Indian when
you set foot on gracious, welcoming and exotic Indian soil,
we detail for you all the elements for an enjoyable shopping
in India experience!
Top scorers on Travelmartindia's shopping in India guide:
Indian textiles, jewelry and carvings, woodcraft and allied
products as well as region-specific handicrafts! Read on for
a deeper insight into the heart of the crafter's communities
in India and what they offer you by way of souvenir shopping.
Textiles:
are one of the biggest of Indian industries with a heady
mix of silks, cottons and wools that have converted millions
of foreign tourists to Indian to using and gifting these
uniquely Indian fabrics and associated products made from
a wide range of above fabric-blends and color choices as
well those with embroidery, bead-work and delicate motifs
patterned in prints and plains.
Of course, the pure varieties of Indian silks, cottons and
wools are tagged at a higher price range unless bought from
wholesale marketers or craftsman's villages, but the mixes
rank high on the popularity charts for easy availability in
most Indian towns and more affordable price tags.
Indian cities like Varanasi (also known as Benares, with a
rich silk variety named after it too) Kanchipuram, Patna,
Murshidabad and Surat are best known for their silk fabrics
while the states of Bengal (Dhakai cotton), Uttar Pradesh
(Chikankaari on muslin blends) and Rajasthan (tie-and-die
patterns, block prints and mirror-worked embroidery) boast
fine cotton textiles that are, for the most part, brightly
colored, but available in pastel shades also.
Jewelry:
from India makes for great gifting ideas as many ancient
techniques using moulds for making gold and silver ornaments
are used till date by traditional craftsmen and states such
as Rajasthan are known particularly for the intricate and
colorful embedded designs such as displayed in Meenakari
and Kundan pieces. A wide variety of precious and semi-precious
gems and filigree worked jewelry pieces at affordable prices
make for stunning souvenirs of Indian hand-crafted charms
in different mediums.
- Touch wood! In a wide range of styles, too: especially
when one considers the rosewood products available in Kerala
and Chennai are as fascinating and exquisitely carved as
the sandalwood items that neighboring Karnataka has to offer.
Kashmir in the north of India offers special gift items
made of walnut wood while Uttar Pradesh is known for whittled
and carved furniture items.
- Native handicraft items: souvenirs that are conversation
pieces too! Most state-emporiums in all major Indian cities
will have an exclusive range of many small to large gift
items made of bronze, brass, marble, silver as well as ivory
and leather.
While other craft-forms such as papier mache, which is exclusive
to Kashmir and at times displays gold leaf designs for an
extra glam dose and jute-products from Bengal that represent
local deities to flower and other nature motifs are much
sought after for their distinctive charm, it is often the
marble replicas of the Taj Mahal in miniature form and the
chess sets with alabaster inlay work, such as chess sets
and ornamental plates, Agra's niche area of souvenir sales,
that get many takers.
Other handicraft items finding good sales include affordable
and road-worthy Indian leatherwork sandals and slippers as
well as small pottery items like miniature diyas, (earthen
lamps, now available with dried flower motifs and fragranced
versions as well) herbal and natural scented or unscented
oils and supplements as well as tiny sets of earthenware village
utensils. (The brass versions are also popular in miniature
form).
Segment III: Where the gadding gets you great buys - India's
shopping hot-spots!
We assure you, you can walk the length and breadth of these
hot-deals regional segments in India and yet crave more than
you can carry for India's a veritable treasure house of unique
and beautiful craftsmanship in many native handicraft items,
jewelry, textiles, leather, hand-woven fabric goods and more!
Perhaps one of the reasons why our Ayurvedic spa packages
seem to have more takers more frequently is the encouragement
for shank's pony being at an all-time high when foreign visitors
come face to face with the endless possibilities for value-for-money
shopping that India offers! But, we're not really saying that:
it's for you to enjoy and judge for yourself!
Street
Shopping: Friendly bargaining will get you everywhere-
as long as you remember to hold out against any emotional
theatrics shown by hawkers towards starving children should
you stick to your cut-down from original price! It's a skill
that has been honed to an art-form by most Indians but Westerners
may still need a bit of practice with striking a bargain since
the hawkers themselves do not expect to be paid the original
asking price and thus, its best to source out appropriate
prices from local friends or your tour guide before price-negotiations.
At times, of course, due to a slump in tourism in certain
sectors, the salespersons may be struggling to make ends meet
and genuinely need to adhere to a strict no-bargaining policy;
however, in most situations of street shopping in India, the
hawkers are game for a bit of good-natured haggling should
the customers keep it respectful and perhaps even be willing
to walk away, quoting a 'last price.'
A good rule of thumb for street shopping in India is to cut
down the price by at least twenty-five percent, if not half.
From clothing to footwear, souvenirs, road-side book stalls,
even the occasional audio and video equipment and accessories
available along street shops, most items are open to bargaining
- you simply need patience and a strong instinct to make the
right hits.
Go
Goa! For great bargains and hot deals: Goa's the place
to go for flea markets on the beach front at Anjuna, every
Wednesday during high season that have an ambience reminiscent
of the happy, hip-hop from the sixties- with wacky clothes
and way-out thingamabobs, ranging from old gramophone records,
reasonably priced porcelain figurines, beeswax candles for
all occasions, crocheted bedspreads, heirlooms someone's sure
to be missing, odd bits of furniture to old wine- the market's
got it all! Even tattoo and hair braiding artistes should
you be so inclined to give yourself a make-over for the moment!
Just Jaipur, yet marvelously majestic even today:
the regal aspect of one of India's most princely states, Rajasthan,
offers many opportunities to tourists for studying skilled
artisans producing exclusive hand-worked fabric pieces such
as skirts (ghagras) and blouses (cholis), tie-and-die dupattas
(long scarves) and ornamental souvenirs with precious and
semi-precious stones: the minakars, kundan workers, gem-cutters
and ornament makers all have workshops at lanes adjoining
the main market area while other areas in the city afford
a close-up to techniques of stone carving. Traditional slippers
and and jutis (embroidered and beaded leather footwear), soft
and light-weight quilts, famous blue pottery products, wide
range of carpets, brassware and traditional sweets are other
good buys.
The heart of India, Delhi- and Delhi's heart? Dilli Haat:
comprising mainly of a group of skilled craftsmen from various
Indian villages, the Delhi government's efforts towards organizing
this sector of commerce are laudable; herbal products, paintings
or antiques, traditional garments from various Indian states
and even reasonably priced ethnic food all find buyers picking
up hand-made jewelry, linen, crockery, ceramics, rugs, furniture
and other Indian knick-knacks.
Another hot-tourist shopping spot in Delhi is undoubtedly
the bustling lanes of Janpath market, a street that boasts
more foreigners than locals on best days and offers wide variety
of handloom garments, tribal and traditional jewelry, fabric
and bead-worked bags and wall hangings, hand-made paper items,
copper and oxidized silver souvenirs with intricate inlay
work while the long line of state emporiums on Baba Kharak
Singh Marg present well-organized shopping expeditions that
tight-on-time tourists crave.
Time permitting, Hauz Khas village offers authentic cottage
industry products from various Indian regions, especially
noteworthy ones being souvenirs made of bamboo, terracotta
and ceramic ware and is worth a visit; the same stands true
of Delhi's Meena Bazar, near the historic Jama Masjid building
housing many an antique, Chandni Chowk with its veritable
lanes and by-lanes gives the patient shopper opportunities
to buy gold and diamond jewelry as well as fine cloth at half
rates of exclusive south Delhi shops.
Mumbai!
More shopping power! Even though Mumbai is known for its
many shopping plazas and malls that are home to many famous
houses of fashion, it is for the pavement shopping experience
that the erstwhile Bombay city is best remembered!
Bargain for your money's worth and you are sure to get it
too- or else, head for the government emporium that stocks
a wide range of Indian handicrafts with at least a dekkho
at Chor Bazaar, Mumbai's flea market specializing in great
buys in brassware and copper, antique glass, wood-worked and
cast-iron products. Mumbai's other shopping greats include
Zaveri Bazaar, Colaba Causeway and Crawford Market.
Southern India's shopping splendors - Chennai's charms:
Silks and cottons from Chennai and nearby Kanchipuram make
for ideal gifts for ladies that appreciate fine fabrics -
and these are available without breaking the bank, at the
many state emporiums on Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose Road.
Other hand worked products from the southern tip of India
sculptures in bronze, sandalwood items, rosewood inlay work
with ivory and Thanjavur paintings. Soapstone and black granite
sculptures as well as divine representations in carvings vie
with shopping choices afforded to visitors by cane, leather
and assorted spice packagings.
Oh Calcutta! Kolkata of today holds the old value
for money bargains of yesteryear -with leisurely buying experiences
of a bygone era ever-present in the genteel sales folk even
today. This aspects makes for an unhurried and memorable shopping
expedition for all tourists visiting Kolkata's New Market
area, the oldest municipal bazaar market, offering a wide
range of clothing, books, dry fruits and confectionary items,
silver filigree worked souvenirs and fancy wood and leather
items.
Adjoining streets still bear witness to the British Raj in
terms of holding on to original English names, such as Bertram
Street and Shakespeare Sarani, which also offer novelties,
jewelry, affordable electrical goods and appliances, antique
wooden furniture and musical instruments that at a fraction
of the market price elsewhere. Kolkata's Dakshinapan Market
is home to handloom and other locally made handicraft items,
which make for an affordable and convenient buy when figuring
out ideal Indian souvenirs.
- Please remember that the government of India does not
permit export of antiques and art objects over 100 years
old, animal skins or objects made from skins. It's recommended
to consult your tour consultant about the items you can
safely take back with you from India and the permissible
quantity of the same.
Here's to happy hearts and tired feet!!
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