ISTANBUL TURKEY HOTELS BOOKING CENTER
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SHOPPING IN TURKEY ISTANBUL
Shops are usually open between 8:3019:00 and normally closed on
Sunday.
Turkey, as a result of its geographical location, is a treasure-house
of hand-made products. These range from carpets and kilims, to gold
and silver jewelry, ceramics, leather and suede clothing, ornaments
fashioned from alabaster, onyx, copper, and meerschaum.
When purchasing carpets, jewelry or leather products, it is
advisable to consult your guide or do your shopping at a reputable
store rather than in the street from vendors.
One
could visit Istanbul for the shopping alone. The Kapali Çarsi, or
Covered Bazaar, in the old city is the logical place to start. This
labyrinth of streets and passages houses more than 4,000 shops. The
names recall the days when each trade had its own quarter:
Goldsmiths' street, Carpet sellers' street, Skullcap makers. Still
the commercial center of the old city, the bazaar is the original
shopping mall with something to suit every taste and pocket
Turkish crafts, the world-renowned carpets, brilliant hand painted
ceramics, copper, brassware, and meerschaum pipes make charming
souvenirs and gifts. The gold jewelry in brilliantly lit cases
blinds passersby. Leather and suede goods of excellent quality make
a relatively inexpensive purchase. The Old Bedesten, in the heart of
the bazaar, offers a curious assortment of antiques. It is worth
poking through the clutter of decades in the hope of finding a
treasure.
The
Misir Çarsisi or Spice Bazaar, next to Yeni Mosque in Eminönü,
transports you to fantasies of the mystical East. The enticing
aromas of cinnamon, caraway, saffron, mint, thyme and every other
conceivable herb and spice fill the air. Sultanahmet has become
another shopping mecca in the old city. The Istanbul Sanatlari
Çarsisi (Bazaar of Istanbul Arts) in the l8th century Mehmet Efendi
Medresesi, and the nearby l6th century Caferaga Medrese, built by
Sinan, offer a chance to see craftsmen at work and to purchase their
wares. In the Arasta (old bazaar) of the Sultanahmet Mosque, a
thriving shopping arcade makes shopping and sightseeing very
convenient.
The
sophisticated shops of the Taksim-Nisantasi-Sisli districts contrast
with the chaos of the bazaars. On Istiklal Avenue, Cumhuriyet Avenue
and Rumeli Avenue, you can browse peacefully in the most fashionable
shops that sell elegant fashions made from Turkey's high quality
textiles. Exquisite jewelry as well as finely designed handbags and
shoes can also be found. The Ataköy Galleria Mall in Ataköy and
Akmerkez Mall in Etiler have branches of Istanbul's most elegant
shops. Bahariye Avenue, Bagdat Avenue, and Capitol Mall on the Asian
side, offer the same goods.
In
Istanbul's busy flea markets you can find an astonishing assortment
of goods, both old and new. Everyday offers a new opportunity to
poke about the Sahaflar Çarsisi and Çinaralti in the Beyazit
district. On Sundays, in a flea market between the Sahaflar and the
Covered Bazaar, vendors uncover their wares on carts and blankets.
The Horhor Çarsisi is a collection of shops that sell furniture of
varying age and quality. The flea market in the Topkapi district, on
Çukurcuma Sokak in Cihangir, on Büyük Hamam Sokak in Üsküdar, in the
Kadiköy Çarsi Duragi area, and between Eminönü and Tahtakale, are
open daily. After a Sunday drive up the Bosphorus, stop between
Büyükdere and Sariyer to wander through another lively market.
Leather
Leather processing is a traditional handicraft in Turkey and was
developed greatly during the Ottoman period. Istanbul's traditional
leather manufacturing industry was concentrated in the district of
Kazlicesme, where Sultan Mehmet the Conqueror had 360 tannery shops
built to be rented out to leather craftsmen. Over the next 500 years
Kazlicesme became a notorious eyesore which could be smelt long
before it came into sight and the hundreds of small manufacturers
have now been moved to a spacious modern industrial estate in
Pendik.
Although it is a big industry, leather-wear is still very dependent
on personal appeal and touch. It is also risky, time-consuming,
laborious and therefore costly. It takes about 45 days to transform
a skin into leather ready for dying and nearly 60 days from skinning
to the finished garment. Also the volume of livestock in Turkey is
not increasing at a sufficiently high rate to keep up with the
industry's demand.
Despite all these difficulties, the leather sector comes after
textiles in terms of export figures. The principal markets for
Turkish leather goods today are the European Union countries led by
Germany and then France.
When purchasing leather goods, one should be aware of the very wide
range of products; different animal skins, baby lamb, lamb, suede,
nubuk, pelluria, etc. and their differing qualities
and prices
Carpet
A
carpet is more a work of art than an article which people step on
for everyday use.
70%
of the tourists coming to Turkey return to their homes with carpets
because Turkey is a treasure-house of carpets.
To
understand how valuable Turkish carpets are, it is better to go back
to their origin. For a nomad who lived in a tent, home was a simple
place; a combination of walls, roof and floor. The floor was not
usually an elaborate structure, just a simple carpet laid directly
onto the earth. The carpet was a bug-excluder, soil leveler,
temperature controller and comfort provider all in one.
The
texture of the material beneath one's feet was sensual proof that
this was home and not the wild.
As
for the history of the carpet, various fragments exist from the 56C
AD, but it is only from the Seljuk period in Anatolia that many more
pieces have survived. Marco Polo, during his journey through Seljuk
lands towards the end of the 13C reported that the best and finest
carpets were produced in Konya.
Since a carpet is more of a work of art, the deeper meanings of each
design cannot be neglected. A carpet can be likened to a poem;
neither can tolerate any extra element which does not contribute to
its wholeness and value. Therefore, just like in a poem, each
pattern of a carpet is chosen for its beauty and motifs are
carefully arranged to form rhymes.
Turkish carpets carry a wide range of symbols. For many centuries,
Anatolian women have been expressing their wishes, fears, interests,
fidelity and love through the artistic medium of carpets. Even so,
there are typical repeated motifs changing from region to region;
geometric designs, tree of life, the central medallion design, the
prayer niches in prayer rugs, etc.
Turkish carpets are made of silk, wool or cotton. A silk pile gives
a carpet the great brilliance. Cotton-warped carpets almost always
have a more rigid and mechanical appearance than woolen-warped.
Yarns have been used in their natural colors or colored with dyes
extracted from flowers, roots and insects.
Carpets are made on vertical looms strung with 3 to 24 warp (vertical)
threads per cm (8 to 60 per in) of width. Working from bottom to
top, the carpet maker either weaves the rug with a flat surface or
knots it for a pile texture. Pile rugs use 57.5 cm / 23 in lengths
of yarn tied in Turkish (Gordes) or Persian (Sehna) knots with rows
of horizontal weft yarn laced over and under the vertical warp
threads for strength. After the carpet is completely knotted, its
pile is sheared and the warp threads at each end are tied into a
fringe. The finer the yarn and the closer the warp threads are
strung together, the denser the weave and, usually, the finer the
quality.
The
best-known flat-woven rug is the kilim which is
lighter in weight and less bulky than pile rugs. It has a plain
weave made by shooting the weft yarn over and under the warp threads
in one row, then alternating the weft in the next row. The
sumak type is woven in a herringbone pattern by wrapping a
continuous weft around pairs of warp threads.
Taking a tour of a carpet production center is highly recommended in
order to have firsthand experience of this art and to see a full
range of the different designs exhibited
F or more information please
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