Thứ Tư, 25 tháng 2, 2015

Saigon's Best Shops

Vietnam’s most frenetic city is a trove of great finds. T+L opens its little black book.
Planning a trip to Vietnam invariably summons visions of the purchases that await: flawless custom clothing, one-of-a-kind colonial curios, high-gloss lacquerware. But high expectations often fizzle upon arrival in Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon, to almost everyone). On the well-trammeled corridor of Dong Khoi Street, in the shadow of Louis Vuitton and Yves Saint Laurent, desultory shops crammed with tchotchkes fail to impress even the most enthusiastic shopper. But singular, affordable discoveries await at lesser-known addresses. Here, 12 of the city’s top shops. Added bonus: all but one are within walking distance of one another. South Vietnam tours

Saigon's Best Shops Bespoke
Saigon’s streets are lined with 24-hour tailors hawking cheap silk ao dai tunics and promising to copy your Margiela trousers and Prada sheaths overnight. Instead, follow the lead of in-the-know expats to Kin Boutique, on Le Thanh Ton Street, where couturier Nguyen Cong Tri fashions runway-worthy satin and silk frocks at ready-to-wear prices (a floaty, turquoise chiffon dress for under $300). But don’t expect a quick turnaround: it will take up to 10 days and a couple of fittings (shipping is available). For dapper menswear—think Seize Sur Vingt—look for the unfortunately named Massimo Ferrari, a narrow boutique in treelined District 3. Custom-made cotton shirts with a dozen collar options start at $110; chic patchwork pants ($165), deconstructed seersucker jackets ($400), and Hermès-style purple suede loafers ($145) offer the urban dandy plenty of choice. 
Saigon's Best Shops
Saigon's Best Shops


Clothing
For more immediate sartorial gratification, Valenciani is the Saigon fashion set’s destination of choice. Racks of candy-colored Indo-chic dresses (from $120) fill the sleek pink-and-black space. Traditional Asian silhouettes are modernized and delivered in unusual fabrics such as houndstooth or nubby wool. Westerners take note: clothes in Vietnam are often displayed only in small sizes, but can be made to your specifications in just a few days. The same holds true at Thuy Nga Design, a minimalist shop tucked under the Beaux-Arts Municipal Theater. Graphic primary-color classics are reminiscent of Michael Kors; a crimson satin party dress with an exposed zipper is a steal for less than $100. If your taste sways more toward breezy linens and silks, head to Sông. Paris-born designer Valerie McKenzie’s eminently packable clothes in saturated hues are a cross between Donna Karan and Calypso. Image Cruise Halong Bay

Leather Goods
Locating Villa Anupa, hidden down a slender lane off Le Thanh Ton Street, is a challenge; even harder is deciding which of Anupa Horvil’s butter-soft leather bags should come home with you. Will it be the white hobo with tourmaline beading ($250)? Or the metallic-gray clutch ($160)? Resort caftans in saturated orange, sapphire, and ikat patterns are ideal for the beach-bound.

Lifestyle Stores
The white-on-white Modernist building that houses Gaya makes a dramatic first impression (yes, those are giant fountain-pen nibs on the façade). Inside, you’ll find the best haute souvenirs in all of Saigon. Highlights include Michele de Albert’s lacquer bowls (from $18) and trays (from $36) in psychedelic colors; with 12 coats of varnish, they practically glow from within. Stepping into L’Usine is a whole other sensory experience: the light-filled industrial space (polished concrete floors; exposed beams) holds a café, a gallery, and a bevy of casual-cool clothing labels—even a selection of vintage bikes.

Linens
Saigon is a bastion of reinvention, and Catherine Denoual, a former Parisian fashion editor, has found her second calling as the doyenne of the perfectly kitted boudoir. Her latest boutique, Catherine Denoual Maison, in the towering Saigon Centre mall, features delicately embroidered sateen bed linens in rich chocolates, golds, and caramels, as well as perhaps the world’s most decadent silk charmeuse robe ($185), for your inner Marlene Dietrich. For more-affordable table linens, head to tiny MG Decoration, on Le Thanh Ton Street, where the selection includes hemstitched cotton and linen pillow covers, table runners, and napkins (from $3), as well as painstakingly crafted needlepoint and cutwork linen place mats.

Children’s Clothes
Parents of little girls thank heaven for Than Thuy, an unassuming shop packed to the rafters with adorable gingham dresses with Peter Pan collars, plaid jumpers, and eyelet nightgowns—all meticulously embroidered, stitched, and smocked by hand. An ideal gift for any new baby: crisp white Mao-collared cotton pj’s with frog closures ($9).

Interiors and Furnishings
Around the corner from Nhu Lan Bakery, one of Saigon’s best banh mi joints, you’ll find Verlim Interiors, whose two rooms abound with perfectly curated antiques and Art Deco reproductions such as a sexy, low-slung mahogany club chair for just $400. If you fall for any of the tasteful settees, or can’t live without an oversize glazed-ceramic lamp, the shop arranges shipping. That striking 19th-century Chinese glass painting in the front room? $2,300. For a more accessible (and luggage-friendly) alternative, Verlim’s lacquer tea caddies come in oxblood or robin’s-egg blue (from $35).

Thứ Tư, 4 tháng 2, 2015

Da Nang travel guide

Over the last almost two decades Da Nang has spiralled upwards and outwards as Vietnam's third city and a distinct feeling that much more is to come hangs in the air. Da Nang was named as a municipal province in 1996 when it was spun off from Quang Nam, and today the city boasts an impressive skyline while resorts and hotels line up along the coast. Thien Mu Pagoda, Hue Travel What sets Da Nang apart from many other developing Southeast Asian cities is that to a large degree the people have benefited from changes. Where once the landstrip to the east of the city was a wasteland of poverty, 10 bridges have been built connecting the two city parts. Meanwhile, with the resorts has come an influx of foreign workers – at last count in 2013 more than 4,000 had chosen to make Da Nang their home -- and many more have made a break from Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City. The city streets are lined with international quality dining and drinking options and it's not just the foreign presence that can be felt, but a more modern, exciting local scene has emerged comfortably alongside as well. MEKONG DELTA TOUR – CAI MON ORCHARD, BEN TRE Travellers using Da Nang as either a transit route to the more touristed Hoi An or as a beach resort break will notice Da Nang's popularity among short-stay Asian travellers and won't see much in the way of the marketing of cultural aspects of the city. To most, the "ancient" side of the city resides solely in the Cham museum and maybe a little towards the fishing villages further north. But exploring away from the main drag of Bach Dang will unearth buckets of colonial architecture, an ancient citadel, a huge street food scene packed full of dishes you'll not see anywhere else in Vietnam and a vibrant atmosphere. Now's the time to sample it for yourself, because those clever folks on the Da Nang tourism board are catching on and it won't be long before you are being herded through on a tour group just like all those folks in Hoi An. Au Co Cruise – Halong Travel Da Nang travel guide Da Nang travel guide The name Da Nang will have a familiar ring to anyone acquainted with America's military action in Vietnam, as it was home to one-fifth of all US service people, and a transit or R&R spot for most of the rest, making it one of the most occupied -- and heavily defended -- cities in South Vietnam during the war period. Eventually, however, it fell to the North Vietnamese in 1975 with hardly a bullet fired. During the French colonial period, Da Nang was called Tourane, a name still used by some of the hotels in the city. The French also used it as a landing point during their war in Vietnam; when the French established a garrison on the nearby Son Tra peninsula (dubbed Monkey Mountain by US troops) more soldiers died from disease building it than during the associated fighting. Today a small cemetery near Tien Sa Beach stands in their memory. Most visitors who pass through Da Nang are on their way to Hoi An, one of Vietnam's top tourist destinations. Those who linger are most likely seeking sun at gorgeous Non Nuoc (China Beach). In Da Nang city itself there's the excellent Cham Museum, a great primer for a visit to My Son further to the south, a large Cao Dai temple and a pleasant riverfront boulevard, while the immediate area includes Marble Mountain, Monkey Mountain and Ba Na hill station. Many travellers who show up in Da Nang find the city dull and end up heading elsewhere fast. It's true that Da Nang is a more difficult city to visit than other spots in Vietnam and you can't experience the best of it just by walking around and seeing what you find, as you can in Nha Trang or Hoi An. You really have to seek out the hidden corners and some advanced preparation can really enrich your experience.

Tại sao không nên mua máy lạnh cũ?

Bạn đang có nhu cầu mua dieu hoa gia re. Đang phân vân không biết nên mua máy lạnh cũ cho rẻ tiền tiết kiệm chi phí hay mua luôn máy lạnh mới. Mua máy lạnh cũ có thực sự rẻ như bạn nghĩ ...?

 Mua máy lạnh cũ có thực sử rẻ như bạn nghĩ

- Điều hòa cũ là dieu hoa am tran đã qua sử dụng và năng suất lạnh sẽ giảm đi một phần vì hệ thống tản nhiệt của dàn lạnh và dàn nóng không còn tốt như máy mới .

- Những dòng máy lạnh có xuất xứ Trung Quốc hay sản xuất ở VN sau một thời gian sử dụng dễ bị hư hỏng rất nhiều và cực kỳ tốn điện vì năng suất lạnh đã giảm đáng kể.

- Nguồn máy lạnh cũ được các đầu mối thu gom về phân loại và bán cho cửa hàng sửa chữa, tân trang, đánh bóng trước khi bán cho khách. Các bạn nên biết là “ tiền nào của nấy” bạn nhé.
Tại sao không nên mua máy lạnh cũ?
Tại sao không nên mua máy lạnh cũ?

- Mặc dù khi đi mua máy chúng ta chọn những cửa hàng quen thuộc hoặc nhờ người có hiểu biết về nhóm hàng điện lạnh đi cùng để kiểm tra hàng. Tuy nhiên có những chiêc máy lạnh, khi kiểm tra có độ lạnh rất tốt nhưng sau một thời gian ngắn đem về sử dụng nó lại hết lạnh, bề ngoài máy thì trông rất tôt nhưng thực chất bên trong thì linh kiện lại không tốt, chắp vá tùm lum khi về sử dụng vài ngày sẽ hư hỏng. Như vậy các bạn vừa tốn thời gian bảo trì, vừa tốn tiền bồi dưỡng, chỉ dân trong nghề mới biết chất lượng máy như thế nào thôi.

Ngoài ra máy lạnh cũ vì đã qua sử dụng một thời gian nên máy hoạt động không êm, sẽ gây tiếng ồn.

Vậy tại sao các bạn không mua dieu hoa Panasonic Inverter mới

- Thứ nhất, mình vừa yên tâm khi sử dụng, giá cả không chênh lệch bao nhiêu nhưng chúng ta được sở hữu một cái máy lạnh như ý muốn.

- Thứ hai, may mới tiết kiệm được nhiều điện năng hơn và thời gian bảo hành cũng được lâu hơn. Không những thế khi sử dụng máy mới chúng ta vừa có được một bầu không khí trong lành, và như vậy có thể bảo vệ được sức khỏe cho gia đình, người thân.

- Thứ ba, khi sử dụng máy mới bạn và gia đình sẽ có được một giấc ngủ sâu mà ngon giấc với sự hoạt động êm dịu của máy lạnh mới
Sau 1 thời gian hoạt động từ khóa " Máy lạnh cũ " của Cty đã tiến lên vị trí đầu tiên của bộ máy tìm kiếm google và đã nhận được rất nhiều đơn đặt hàng từ phía khách hàng.

Rút kinh nghiệm từ thực tế và sau khi nhận được nhiều ý kiến đóng góp từ phía các khách hàng thân thiết đã chọn mua và sử dụng máy lạnh cũ. Thì Maylanhgiagoc.vn gửi lời khuyên đến các khách hàng đang có nhu cầu mua sắm máy lạnh là hãy cố gắng tậu cho mình 1 chiếc máy lạnh mới chính hãng, được bảo hành chính hãng để sử dụng được ưng ý, yên tâm và thoải mái nhất.