🌹Get your 30% Coupon: Share your pictures wearing Bluenoemi's Jewels. NOW!. 🌹Newsletter #184🌹
Published: Tue, 02/26/19
🌹Get your 30% Coupon: Share your pictures wearing Bluenoemi's Jewels. NOW!. 🌹Newsletter #184🌹
Dear ,
Have you been at Tel Aviv's HaCarmel Market? I invite you to visit and meanwhile have a look at some pictures.
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Bluenoemi's Team @ Bluenoemi Jewelry & Gifts
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🌹HaCarmel Tel Aviv Market 🌹
The Carmel Market (the Shuk Hacarmel) is the largest market, or shuk, in Tel Aviv. A vibrant marketplace where traders sell everything from clothing to spices, and fruit to electronics, visiting the Carmel Market is a fascinating thing to do in Tel Aviv. The hustle and bustle, vibrant noise, colors and smells, as well as its reputation as the largest authentic Middle-Eastern style shuk in Tel Aviv, all combine to make the
Carmel Market a favorite place for everyone from first time tourists visiting the city, to locals who come here to get the freshest fruit and vegetables, and some of the cheapest products in the city. The market can at first appear to be a little intimidating, with so many senses stimulated at once – the sounds of the traders, the smells and flavors of the fresh produce, and sights of so many interesting things at once.
About the Carmel Market
The Carmel Market first opened in 1920, some eleven years after the establishment of the city, making it an integral part of the history of Tel Aviv. Whilst much of the trade has now shifted into modern malls and onto the internet, the market is still immensely popular and its narrow street is busy whenever you visit, particularly before Shabbat on Thursdays and Fridays, as residents buy supplies for their family meals. Recent years have seen a growing number of
boutique stalls and food places opening alongside the traditional traders, from boutique beers to arrays of halva, and small eateries who take advantage of the market’s produce.
The Carmel Market is relatively simple in layout and location. The ‘Shuk’ occupies one street which runs south from the junction of King George Street, Allenby, and Sheinkin Street to the Carmelit Bus depot in the south.
The top end of the Carmel Market is traditionally focused on fashion and electronics, whilst the lower part is mainly food and fresh produce stalls. Haggling is part of the deal at any Middle Eastern Market, however at the Carmel Market, as Tel Aviv has Westernised, it has become less common on smaller purchases, but still very much part of the experience when it comes to larger purchases!
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