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Turkey

Shopping in Turkey

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of 7

  1. A

    Jennifer's Hamam

    Owned by Canadian Jennifer Gaudet, the two Arasta Bazaar branches of this shop stock top-quality hamam items including towels, robes and peştemals (bath wraps) produced on old-style hand-shuttled looms. It also sells natural soaps and keses (coarse cloth mittens used for exfoliation).

    reviewed

  2. B

    Sali Pazari

    On Tuesday there is a massive market in Kadıköy, on the Asian side: the Sali Pazari. The cheapest clothes in town are on sale here, so if you've been on the road for a while and your underwear needs replenishing, this is the place to do it! To get there, get off the ferry and move straight ahead along the major boulevard of Söğütlüçeşme Caddesi for about 500m until you come to a busy intersection, Altıyol Square.

    Cross over, take the right fork and continue eastward along Kuşdili Caddesi for another 250m (three cross streets). At Hasırcıbaşı Caddesi turn left and you'll see the tent-city market spread out before you. It's open between 08:00 and 18:00. On Sunday…

    reviewed

  3. C

    Gönül Paksoy

    Gönül Paksoy creates and sells pieces that transcend fashion and step into art. In fact, her work was the subject of a 2007 exhibition at İstanbul's Rezan Haş Gallery. These two shops showcase her distinctive clothing, which is made using naturally dyed fabrics and is often decorated with vintage beads. She also creates and sells delicate silk and cotton knits and exquisite jewellery based on traditional Ottoman designs.

    reviewed

  4. D

    Muhlis Günbattı

    One of the most famous stores in the bazaar, Muhlis Günbattı specialises in suzani fabrics from Uzbekistan. These beautiful bedspreads, tablecloths and wall hangings are made from fine cotton embroidered with silk. As well as the textiles, it stocks top-quality carpets, brightly coloured kilims and a small range of antique Ottoman fabrics richly embroidered with gold. Its second shop in Sultanahmet sells a wider range of costumes at stratospheric prices.

    reviewed

  5. E

    Mavi Jeans

    The dress code of choice for İstanbul's youth is a pair of worn jeans (usually tight and low-slung) and a fair percentage of these would have been purchased from local company Mavi. Among the most popular ranges are those designed by internationally recognised fashion designer, Rıfat Özbek. Prices are at least half of those of foreign imports. There are other branches at İstiklal Caddesi 195 and 425.

    reviewed

  6. F

    Milano Güzeliş

    When this family-run business started trading here in 1957, it was one of only 10 or so jewellery shops in the Grand Bazaar. The Güzelış family have been making jewellery to order using every gold grade and every conceivable gem ever since, and have built a trusted reputation in the process.

    reviewed

  7. G

    Ikonium

    Konya was traditionally a felt-making centre but the art is fast dying out in Turkey. Passionate keçeki (felt-maker) Mehmet and his Argentinean wife Silvia offer treats including op-art-style patterns and what might be the world's largest hand-decorated piece of felt.

    reviewed

  8. Urfa's Bazaar

    After visiting the Şanlıurfa Museum, ponder your new-found knowledge with a wander through Urfa's bazaar. Spreading itself east of the Narıncı Camii, it is a jumble of streets, some covered, some open, selling everything from sheepskins and pigeons to jeans and handmade shoes. It was largely built by Süleyman the Magnificent in the mid-16th century. The best idea is just to dive in and inevitably get lost. Women should be on guard for lustful hands.

    One of the most interesting areas is the bedesten (kazaz pazarı), an ancient caravanserai where silk goods were sold. Today you'll still find silk scarves sold here, as well as gaudy modern carpets and the lovely blue…

    reviewed

  9. H

    Ali Muhıddin Hacı Bekir

    It's obligatory to sample lokum while in İstanbul, and one of the best places to do so is at this historic shop, which has been operated by members of the same family for over 200 years. Buy it sade (plain), or made with cevizli (walnut), fıstıklı (pistachio), badem (almond) or roze (rose water). There's another store in Beyoğlu.

    reviewed

  10. I

    Yemeniciler Arastası

    The restored Yemeniciler Arastası is the best place to start looking for crafts, although the makers of the light, flat-heeled shoes who used to work here have long since moved out. The further you go from the arasta the more likely you are to come across shops occupied by authentic working saddle-makers, felt-makers and other artisans.

    reviewed

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  12. J

    Konya's Bazaar

    Konya's bazaar sprawls virtually all the way to the Mevlâna Museum, cramming the narrow streets with stalls, roving vendors and the occasional horse-drawn cart. The streets are divided up in very medieval fashion: here a section for coils of rope, there one for gold jewellery, nearby one for mobile-phone accessories. There's a concentration of shops selling religious paraphernalia and tacky souvenirs at the Mevlâna Museum end.

    It is the most exciting place to shop for fresh fruit, vegetables, cheese etc.

    reviewed

  13. K

    Mehmet Çetinkaya Gallery

    Mehmet Çetinkaya is known as one of the country's foremost experts on antique oriental carpets and kilims. His flagship store-cum-gallery stocks items that have artistic and ethnographic significance, and is full of treasures. There's a second shop selling rugs, textiles and objects in the Arasta Bazaar.

    reviewed

  14. L

    İznik Foundation

    Recently, İznik tile-making has been undergoing a revival, and that the town is proud of this fact is evident from the posters of tiles on display in many restaurants and hotels. Original İznik tiles are antiquities and cannot be exported from Turkey, but new tiles make great, if not particularly cheap, souvenirs. Good places to start looking are the small workshops along Salim Demircan Sokak, and the workshop belonging to the İznik Foundation.

    reviewed

  15. M

    Haremlique

    The shops around the fashionable W Istanbul hotel are some of the most glamorous in the city. Among the international labels that are based here is this local business, which sells top-drawer bed linen and bathwares. Come here to source items such as boudoir cushion-covers featuring Ottoman rococo prints – they're certain to wow your guests back home.

    reviewed

  16. N

    Midnight Express

    Local designer Banu Bora chose the ultra-chic Mısır Apartment Building on İstiklal Caddesi as the Beyoğlu location for her business, reinforcing its status as the city’s most sophisticated fashion boutique. It stocks Bora’s own labels (there are two) plus clothes and accessories from local and international designers. If the door is closed, ring the bell. There’s another store in Bebek that sells both fashion and homewares.

    reviewed

  17. O

    Istanbul Handicrafts Market

    Set in the small rooms surrounding the leafy courtyard of the 18th-century Cedid Mehmed Efendi Medresesi, this handicrafts centre next door to the Yeşil Ev hotel is unusual in that local artisans sometimes work here and don’t mind if visitors watch. Their creations are available for purchase; it’s a great place to source beautiful calligraphy, glassware, hand embroidery, miniature paintings, ceramics and fabric dolls.

    reviewed

  18. P

    Bazaar

    İzmir's Bazaar is a little slice of fast-vanishing Turkey; this is also the place to head for İzmir's heart and soul. It's a great place to get lost for a few hours amid the stalls, sound of caged songbirds, wedding dress shops and spice stalls. Seek out if you can the flower and bead markets, then stop for a reviving shot of Turkish coffee in one of the delightful cafés at its core.

    reviewed

  19. Q

    Ark Lıne

    One of the motifs of contemporary Turkish fashion is the inspiration local designers take from their Ottoman heritage. Ark Line has followed Gönül Paksoy in referencing the sartorial style of the sultans and their entourages in its collections. The clothes here are nowhere near as assured and desirable as Paksoy’s, but they are considerably cheaper, meaning that they sit within most budgets.

    reviewed

  20. R

    Leyla Eski Eşya Pazarlama

    If you love old clothes, you'll adore Leyla Seyhanlı's boutique. Filled to the brim with piles of vintage embroidery and outfits, it's a rummager's delight. It stocks everything from 1950s taffeta party frocks to silk-embroidery cushion covers that would've been at home in the Dolmabahçe Palace linen cupboard.

    reviewed

  21. S

    Yazmacı Necdet Danış

    Fashion designers and buyers from every corner of the globe know that when in İstanbul, this is where to come to source top-quality textiles. It's crammed with bolts of fabric of every description – shiny, simple, sheer and sophisticated – as well as peştemals, scarves and clothes. Murat Danış next door is part of the same operation.

    reviewed

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  23. Istinye Park

    Perhaps the best of the city’s malls is İstinye Park, located in the upper Bosphorus suburb of İstinye. You’ll find classy department stores Beymen and Vakko here, a slew of prestige international designers, and high-street chains including Banana Republic, Marks & Spencer, Mavi and Zara. Eateries include branches of Mezzaluna and The House Café.

    reviewed

  24. T

    Abdulla Natural Products

    The first of the Western-style designer stores to appear in this ancient marketplace, Abdulla sells top-quality cotton bed linen and towels, handspun woollen throws from Eastern Turkey, cotton peştemals (bath wraps) and pure olive-oil soap. There's another branch in the Fes Cafe in Nuruosmaniye.

    reviewed

  25. U

    Tezgah Alley

    Put your elbows to work fighting your way to the front of the tezgah (stalls) in this alleyway off İstiklal Caddesi, which are heaped with T-shirts, jumpers, pants and shirts on offer for under TL10 per piece. Turkey is a major centre of European clothing manufacture, and the items here are often factory run-ons from designer or high-street-chain orders.

    reviewed

  26. V

    Artrium

    Crammed with antique ceramics, calligraphy, maps, prints and jewellery, this Aladdin's cave of a shop is most notable for the exquisite miniatures by Iranian artist Haydar Hatemi.

    reviewed

  27. W

    Tuğba

    Recently awarded second prize for the 'Best Turkish Delight in Turkey', this well-known chain sells Turkish delight in all colours, flavours and forms, as well as dried nuts, seeds and fruit (great for long bus journeys). They also gift-wrap if you want to cart a year's supply home. Try the exquisite duble anterplı (pistaccio-studded variety).

    reviewed