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Thai Goods: Anutin rejects pity-based purchases by foreigners


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Posted
On 2/22/2024 at 6:40 AM, webfact said:

Anutin Charnvirakul emphasized the need for significant development in the OTOP (One Tambon One Product) program

 

Do I hear Thaksin's voice again?

 

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Posted
On 2/22/2024 at 6:40 AM, webfact said:

He shared his experience of purchasing a durable bag from Sakon Nakhon for only 65 baht ($2), ......

 

Highlighting the bag's quality, made from leftover fabric,

 

I can imagine the promotional slogans....

 

"Thailand, hub of durable bags made from leftover fabric"

Posted
On 2/22/2024 at 7:03 AM, spidermike007 said:

Many nations have incredible craft work, such as Mexico, Indonesia (especially Bali) and India. World class crafts. World famous crafts. Thailand has a very limited craft industry, and the quality is not high, nor are Thai crafts recognized around the world, with the exception of some of it's silk. 

 

More nonsense from one of the most silly men in the country, and one who has no business pretending to be a leader. 

Souvenirs in tourist areas are mainly low quality tat imported from China or Burma.

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Posted
On 2/22/2024 at 7:03 AM, spidermike007 said:

Many nations have incredible craft work, such as Mexico, Indonesia (especially Bali) and India.

I'm curious what you think is made well in India. I think charas is the only thing and technically those people are not Indian per-se.

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Posted
20 hours ago, Dogmatix said:

Souvenirs in tourist areas are mainly low quality tat imported from China or Burma.

Even in non tourist areas, everywhere you go in Bali, India, other parts of Indonesia, or Mexico you find very high quality handmade silver jewelry, tapestries, paintings, drawings, wooden crafts, paper maiche, of exceptional quality. The list goes on. Very, very little of that is found in Thailand, the handicrafts are of exceptionally low quality. 

 

It is quite possible it has something to do with the educational system and the fact that this system just does not encourage creativity. Of course it could be a multitude of other cultural factors too, but the bottom line is that most of us know that Thai handicrafts are pretty marginal. 

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Posted
34 minutes ago, Sluglord said:

I'm curious what you think is made well in India. I think charas is the only thing and technically those people are not Indian per-se.

I've spent a lot of time in India, I lived in worked there for a couple of years, and been all over the country. The handicrafts are astonishing, the silver jewelry, the jewelry done with semi-precious stones, the paintings, the hand woven carpets, the weaving, the woolen shawls, the list goes on. I could literally recite 75 different areas where the handicrafts are world class. Perhaps you haven't traveled enough when you were there. 

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Posted
40 minutes ago, spidermike007 said:

Even in non tourist areas, everywhere you go in Bali, India, other parts of Indonesia, or Mexico you find very high quality handmade silver jewelry, tapestries, paintings, drawings, wooden crafts, paper maiche, of exceptional quality. The list goes on. Very, very little of that is found in Thailand, the handicrafts are of exceptionally low quality. 

 

It is quite possible it has something to do with the educational system and the fact that this system just does not encourage creativity. Of course it could be a multitude of other cultural factors too, but the bottom line is that most of us know that Thai handicrafts are pretty marginal. 


But they make some of the best 20 Baht wooden backscratchers and body massagers you can find. 😂

 

Actually, ceramics and bamboo furniture from the north are quite decent. And in the North there are also artisans making some high quality ornamental stuff made from pewter and other high quality materials.
 

To find the really good stuff in Thailand requires visiting trade shows though and you aren't going to find much of it in tourist markets. It's here, but it's not in the mainstream and it's usually pretty high priced if the quality is high. Occasionally you can find some decent stuff in Hang Dong, but it's hit or miss. 

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Posted
1 hour ago, spidermike007 said:

I've spent a lot of time in India, I lived in worked there for a couple of years, and been all over the country. The handicrafts are astonishing, the silver jewelry, the jewelry done with semi-precious stones, the paintings, the hand woven carpets, the weaving, the woolen shawls, the list goes on. I could literally recite 75 different areas where the handicrafts are world class. Perhaps you haven't traveled enough when you were there. 

I've spent a cumulative total of about four years on the subcontinent.

 

Gems polishing... I'll give you that point. Perhaps some local types of textiles.

 

I'd always felt sorry for the Indians having to buy only from their manufacturing base. The stuff is poorly engineered and practically arrives broken. I'd always wondered why India didn't just simply get a fan or whatever from China and disassemble it and copy it.

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Posted

          I can sought of see his point A 2$ bag is hardly going to interest the super rich, except, as he said for a pity or sympathy purchase, that people will take home, and, after they have finished boring their friends about  seeing the real Thailand , they stash under the kitchen sink never to be touched again until they bin it 6 months later

          Where as if they stuck it in a chintzy shop in the airport , slapped a louis vuitton type badge on it , and a $3000 price tag  idiots with more money than sense would be queuing up to buy it, heralding it as their latest fashion discovery, and taking it every  day  to the  overpriced places that idiots with more money than sense frequent.

            All he has to do is get someone like Posh spice or one of the Kardashians to be seen with one and the job is as good as sorted, theoretically at least

 

            What they will probably do is ban foreigners from buying OTOP products or introduce a fully endorsed double pricing protocol which will have the same effect as a ban

         

Posted
3 hours ago, spidermike007 said:

I've spent a lot of time in India, I lived in worked there for a couple of years, and been all over the country. The handicrafts are astonishing, the silver jewelry, the jewelry done with semi-precious stones, the paintings, the hand woven carpets, the weaving, the woolen shawls, the list goes on. I could literally recite 75 different areas where the handicrafts are world class. Perhaps you haven't traveled enough when you were there. 

Jade Carvings, Marble inlays, (the Taj Mahal). blankets........

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Posted

Is that supposed to be a bag? I could fill that wiff just me nuts gov. 65b! jeez, 20b and I could buy a bag for all my groceries not just 1 onion. they could make it bigger to fit his head.

dunce.jpg.eea127372327cfc24fbe23607fef5e4b.jpg

 

 

Posted

Bought wine, if you could call it that at last OTOP event. Seller claimed in was 17%! more like 7% and disgusting, mulberry I think it was.

Posted
26 minutes ago, brianthainess said:

Jade Carvings, Marble inlays, (the Taj Mahal). blankets........

These quilts were mind boggling in their intricacy. The silver and gold jewelry is astonishing. The list goes on and on. 

IMG-20240225-WA0003.jpg

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Posted
1 minute ago, spidermike007 said:

These quilts were mind boggling in their intricacy. The silver and gold jewelry is astonishing. The list goes on and on. 

IMG-20240225-WA0003.jpg

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Morocco too Blankets, Carved bone, silverwork, and as it's Anutin their hash too. :stoner:

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