Hoi An hosts first pan-Asian silk trade fair
Craftsmen, experts, traders and designers of silk from China, Japan, India, Myanmar, France, Laos, Cambodia, Thailand and seven traditional silk villages in Vietnam joined together on March 28 in the first Vietnam-Asia Silk Culture Festival at Hoi An Silk Village.
“It’s a great opportunity for silk producers, exporters and importers, designers, intermediaries, and government agencies related to silk promotion to share experiences for the future development of the silk trade,” said Chairman of the Asia Silk Alliance, Dilip Barooah.
“The festival also opens up chances for silk centres in Asia and the world by building up connections in production and export,” he said.
He added that the Vietnam-Asia Silk Festival was held with an aim of promoting the silk trades of China, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, Japan, Myanmar and Vietnam.
He said the festival was a great opportunity that had taken him to the peaceful and beautiful ancient city of Hoi An.
The Director of the Hangzhou Silk Culture and Brand Research Centre, Fei Jianming, expressed thanks to authorities of Quang Nam Province and Hoi An City for their strong support in hosting the festival.
He said the event would help connect world silk centres and Hoi An, as well as boosting chances of cooperation among silk producers and traders worldwide.
The two-day festival will also see a fashion show, a seminar on silk history and development with presentations and discussions on improving silk yield, silk branding and marketing, silk export development, and silk standards, certification and regulations.
The festival also includes displays from elegant French fashion designers, Myanmar silk with special patterns, Cashmere silk from India, Nanchong Yinhai silk and Hangzhou Jiahe silk textiles from China, and silks from Nishijin, Japan.
The famous silk villages of Van Phuc, Nha Xa, Phung Xa, Ma Chau, Tan Chau My Nghiep and Bao Loc of Vietnam will also be represented.
Last year, Hoi An Silk Village represented Vietnam and joined the Asia Silk Alliance as one of seven founding members with responsibility for linking Vietnamese silk enterprises with the wider Asian silk community.
The silk village, located at 28 Nguyen Tat Thanh Street in Hoi An, is a silk-weaving centre and a living museum of the ancient trade in the central region.
It was voted the third best attraction in Hoi An by travel website TripAdvisor in 2014.
The two-hectare area cultivates 40 strains of mulberry, whose leaves are feed for silk worms, including some that the former rulers of the area, the Champa kingdom, used to produce their best quality silk.