Source:
https://scmp.com/lifestyle/fashion-luxury/article/1834188/five-hot-destinations-fashion-shopping-east-asia
Lifestyle/ Fashion & Beauty

Five hot destinations for fashion shopping in East Asia

See our insider guides to the best places to buy clothes, jewellery and more

Trendy Samcheong in Seoul. Photo: Dylan Goldby

From Shanghai to Seoul and Bali to Delhi, East Asian cities ooze style. You'll be hard to put to avoid picking up some next time you visit any of these fashion capitals this summer. So we thought we'd make your shopping easier by pulling together our guides for Asian fashion buyers. Click on the headlines below to open our city guides. 

JDV on Changle Lu, Shanghai. Photo: Cmoy Photo
JDV on Changle Lu, Shanghai. Photo: Cmoy Photo

JDV, a menswear boutique from Wenzhou. offers shirts, hats, belts and shoes inspired by '30s and '40s gentlemen's attire and updated for the 21st century

 

 

 

 

 

Kardo in Delhi.
Kardo in Delhi.

Walk across the street and you see a fruit hawker or a woman dyeing cloth, and in the midst of this village, you have a fashion epicentre

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Simple Konsep in Bali.
Simple Konsep in Bali.

Bali has lured an array of international designers inspired by the colourful life on the Hindu island. The most successful have several outlets

 

 

 

 

 

 

A boutique in Apgujeong.
A boutique in Apgujeong.

 Samcheong ... has streets peppered with tiny, trendy boutiques, such as the fabulous Luielle hat shop. Look your best, it is the kind of place where people get caught up in a photoshoot that seems to be taking place on every street corner.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tonle in Phnom Penh.
Tonle in Phnom Penh.

Young local designers, a cosmopolitan vibe and strong local identity make for a growing choice of vintage and indie boutiques, and high-end shops, in the Cambodian capital

 

 

 

 

Street style in Taipei. Photo: James Bent
Street style in Taipei. Photo: James Bent

The region's fashion savvy citizens have been channelling more energy into expressing themselves through their clothes, and in doing so have attracted the camera lens of Singapore-based British photographer James Bent in his new publication Asian Street Fashion (Thames & Hudson).

"It was completely unplanned," says the photographer, who had been writing short stories and was looking for interesting personalities to provide inspiration. Bent's book focuses on Asia, and aims to break away from stereotypes or preconceptions associated with each city, showing instead what he calls "that period in which fashion hit the streets with a nice mix of innocence and heartfelt development".