guides
  • SHOPS IN ISTANBUL

  • Shops in Istanbul are the lifeblood of the city. The the town owed much of its past fame and fortune to its perfect location at the centre of ancient trade routes between East and West and even now the Bosphorus presents the spectacle of a constant parade of container ships ferrying everything from agricultural produce to narcotics, to and from the Black Sea ports and the world at large.

    The city has always consumed its fair share of that trade and all the exchange had to be housed somewhere. So with considerable foresight Mehmet the Conqueror founded the Kapali Carshi - the Grand Bazaar - in 1461. It is now the oldest shopping mall in the world, a city unto itself of around 5,500 shops, attracting tourists and locals alike with the rarefied allure of fine carpets, precious antiques and artfully wrought jewellery as well as the quotidian promise of acres of fake label handbags and dirt-cheap clothes. Finding one's way through, or even surviving, the bewildering array of stores and products, the noise, the hawkers and the essential haggling requires a tough sensibility, but a visit to what is the greatest oriental bazaar of them all is rightly considered de rigueur.
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    • Grand Bazaar
    • GRAND BAZAAR

      • 9am-7pm Mon-Sat. Closed Sun.
      • Sultanahmet
    • The spiritual home of shopping in Istanbul, the Grand Bazaar is an extraordinary city unto itself, divided into mini-suburbs of one trade or another. At its heart is ç Bedesten (Inner Bazaar), the ancient and comparatively genteel home of many of the market’s most respected merchants. It’s here you’ll find many of the bazaar’s highest value items, antiques, metalwork and curios. To its north and west are the carpet dealers, to its south and east, jewellers and gold and silver merchants. Textile and leather dealers are found primarily in the alleys at the market’s extreme west. Shopping in the Grand Bazaar seriously takes at least half a day, allowing time for looking, comparing, getting tired, looking again, haggling, arguing, and possibly storming off and starting the whole process somewhere else. But that would be bad manners, as you shouldn’t enter into protracted bargaining unless you intend to buy. For that vital rest, bite to eat and stimulating coffee, look for the Fes Café (Halicilar Caddesi 62 just north of ç Bedesten), Julia’s Kitchen (Keseciler Caddesi, south of ç Bedesten) or Sark Kahvesi (Yalikçilar Caddesi 134, on the corner of Fesciler Caddesi). With around 5,000 shops (including 1,600 jewellers alone) on 60 streets, the selection below amounts only to a few highlights.  Abdulla Natural Ürünler (Halicilar Caddesi 58-60) – 100% natural, handmade textiles and soaps.  Adiyaman Pazari (Yalikçilar Caddesi 74-46) – top dealer in Gaziantep weaves, the highly-coloured, traditional, Ottoman textiles.   Barocco Gümü (Kalcilar Han 31) – master silversmith Baruyr Ortainceyan’s shop; simple, affordable pieces alongside the fabulous, ornate and expensive.  Dervis (Keseciler Caddesi 33–35) – excellent quality textiles, including cotton towels from Bursa, as well as natural soaps.  EthniCon (Takkeciler Sokak 58–60) – contemporary and highly fashionable patchwork kilims; fixed prices.   Galeri  irvan Halicilik (Halicilar Caddesi 50-54) – respected carpet dealer.   Kalendar Carpets (Takkeciler Sokak 24-26, www.kalendercarpet.com) – top (and therefore pricey) Anatolian carpets; located on main carpet alley.   Kurtolu Hali (Zenneciler Sokak 24) – well-designed carpets and kilims.  Lumes (Zincirli Han 16) – dazzling Ottoman-style chandeliers.   Pako (Kalpakçilar Caddesi 87) – beautiful handbags and purses.   Sisko Osman (Zincirli Han 15) – eponymous shop of the Bazaar’s most famous carpet dealer; highest quality.   Yörük Deri (Kürkçüler Çarsisi 17) – specialist in ethnic rugs, especially from the Caucausus
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