in gold and diamonds, certified solitaire diamonds and hallmarked jewellery. Its clients include generations of high-profile families.
BABA KHARAK SINGH MARG: If you would like to have the pick of all states, go to the State Emporia Complex on Baba Kharak Singh Marg. Shawls are the main attraction of Zoon, the Kashmir emporium, and bronze lamps and icon of Poompuhar, the Tamil Nadu emporium. Those interested in exquisite silks should go to Cauvery, the Karnataka emporium. Amrapali, the Bihar emporium, is famous for Madhubani paintings, while Rajasthali, the Rajasthan emporium, and Gurjari, the Gujarat emporium, are popular destinations for printed cottons, miniature paintings and
SEWA Mahila Bazaar
Held on: Sundays 9am to 5pm
SEWA Delhi, a women's organization working for the poor women of the informal sector, has started organizing a Sunday Mahila Bazaar. This market is unique in that it is run only by women. About 200 poor women members of SEWA Delhi from slums of Raghubir Nagar, Jahangirpuri and Sundernagari sell both second-hand and new items in this bazaar. This includes handicrafts, jewellery, shoes, cosmetics, clothes, household items and a lot more at nominal prices. The market is a tourist attraction as it provides cultural and social interaction with the locals.
Behind Zakir Hussain College, Tagore Road, Delhi,
Ph: 9953444320, 25840937
jewellery. You get tea at Manjusha, the West Bengal emporium, and wood carvings at Mrignayani, the Madhya Pradesh emporium. Manjusha is also popular for its silk and cotton saris
— Taant, Dhakai, Baatik, Jamdani, Kantha, Baluchari and Swarnachuri. The three-storeyed Tripura emporium called Purbasha is jam-packed with goodies for your home: beautiful stuff made of bamboo and cane.
Rajiv Gandhi Handicrafts Bhavan, right next to the emporia complex, houses stores that sell books, handicrafts, paper products, rural handicrafts, etc.
BABA KHARAK SINGH MARG: If you would like to have the pick of all states, go to the State Emporia Complex on Baba Kharak Singh Marg. Shawls are the main attraction of Zoon, the Kashmir emporium, and bronze lamps and icon of Poompuhar, the Tamil Nadu emporium. Those interested in exquisite silks should go to Cauvery, the Karnataka emporium. Amrapali, the Bihar emporium, is famous for Madhubani paintings, while Rajasthali, the Rajasthan emporium, and Gurjari, the Gujarat emporium, are popular destinations for printed cottons, miniature paintings and
SEWA Mahila Bazaar
Held on: Sundays 9am to 5pm
SEWA Delhi, a women's organization working for the poor women of the informal sector, has started organizing a Sunday Mahila Bazaar. This market is unique in that it is run only by women. About 200 poor women members of SEWA Delhi from slums of Raghubir Nagar, Jahangirpuri and Sundernagari sell both second-hand and new items in this bazaar. This includes handicrafts, jewellery, shoes, cosmetics, clothes, household items and a lot more at nominal prices. The market is a tourist attraction as it provides cultural and social interaction with the locals.
Behind Zakir Hussain College, Tagore Road, Delhi,
Ph: 9953444320, 25840937
jewellery. You get tea at Manjusha, the West Bengal emporium, and wood carvings at Mrignayani, the Madhya Pradesh emporium. Manjusha is also popular for its silk and cotton saris
— Taant, Dhakai, Baatik, Jamdani, Kantha, Baluchari and Swarnachuri. The three-storeyed Tripura emporium called Purbasha is jam-packed with goodies for your home: beautiful stuff made of bamboo and cane.
Rajiv Gandhi Handicrafts Bhavan, right next to the emporia complex, houses stores that sell books, handicrafts, paper products, rural handicrafts, etc.
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