Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - Where is the clothing wholesale market in Thailand?

Where is the clothing wholesale market in Thailand?

Chatuchak weekend market: Many buses in downtown Bangkok will pass through the weekend market, which takes about 1 hour. It is most convenient to take the empty rail. Under the moshit station, Chatuchak weekend market is only open on Saturday and Sunday, and it is open from 65,438+00 am to 6 pm.

Chiang Mai is the main manufacturing center of high-quality handicrafts in Thailand. You can buy exquisite antiques, silverware, embroidery, Tess, cotton products, knitting baskets, silverware, furniture, lacquerware and paper umbrellas at Chiang Mai Night Market or downtown shopping mall and NIMMANHEMIN Road. (Sunday Pedestrian Street in Chiang Mai, 3 pm to 1 1) (San Kamphaeng Villge, a Thai village about 9 kilometers away from the city, is a cooking handicraft village and a major supplier of silk and cotton products in Thailand)

Generally speaking, Thai people's clothes are relatively simple, mostly rural national clothes.

The traditional national costume of Thai men is called "Tripping Tail Curtain" sarong and "Panong" sarong.

Panong is a kind of clothing that wraps the waist and legs with cloth. The tail curtain is wrapped around the legs with a piece of cloth about 3 meters long, and then the two ends of the cloth are rolled together, passed between the legs and stuffed into the waist. It looks like China's knickerbockers. Sarong is one of the traditional clothes with the longest history among Thai civilians, because it has a wide hem and is comfortable and cool to wear.

The women's tube skirt is the bottom dress of Thai women, which was popular during Rama VI of Bangkok Dynasty (19 10- 1925). A skirt is the same as a sarong. The two ends of this cloth are sewn into a cylinder. When wearing, first put your body into the cloth tube, then put the cloth on the right with your right hand, hold the cloth on the right side of your waist with your left hand, then put it back with your right hand, turn it back to the left, overlap it at the left waist and stuff it into the left waist. You can also do the same thing with your left hand in the opposite direction.

With the development of society and the influence of the outside world, great changes have taken place in the clothing of contemporary Thais. It is common for young people in rural areas to wear pants and shirts. Men in cities are used to wearing uniforms and suits, and they can wear pants, shirts and ties on most occasions. Women, on the other hand, like to wear suits and skirts, probably influenced by women's traditional dresses. Suit skirts are generally perfectly tailored and close to the hips.