# Lanna handicrafts: meaningful Chiang Mai souvenirs

> A guide to Lanna handicrafts and the best Chiang Mai souvenirs — Bo Sang umbrellas, silver, silk, woodcarving and celadon, plus where to buy them well.

Chiang Mai was a craft capital of the **Lanna kingdom**, and seven centuries later it still is. That matters when you're shopping, because the souvenirs here can actually mean something — a parasol painted by hand, a bowl of silver hammered out by a smith you watched at work. You just need to know what the region makes, and where to find the real thing.

## The crafts worth knowing

Start with the most photographed: the **Bo Sang umbrella**. In **Bo Sang village**, on the San Kamphaeng "handicraft highway" east of the city, families have made hand-painted paper and silk parasols for over a century, ever since a wandering monk brought the technique back from Burma. The frames are split bamboo, the canopy is **sa (mulberry) paper**, and the flowers and birds are brushed on by hand — you can watch a painter add a peacock to your bag or your camera for a few baht. If you're here in the third week of January, the **Bo Sang Umbrella Festival** turns the whole village into a riot of colour.

Then there's **silver**. **Wualai Road**, just south of the old city wall, has been the silversmiths' quarter since King Kawila resettled Burmese-Shan craftsmen here around 1800. The signature work is repoussé — bowls and panels hammered into relief from behind — and you'll still hear the tapping from open workshops. **San Kamphaeng** is the place for handwoven **silk and cotton**, sold by the metre or made up into scarves and cushion covers. Out in **Hang Dong**, the woodcarving village of **Ban Tawai** is street after street of carved teak, from teaspoons to temple doors. Add **celadon** — that pale jade-green stoneware with its fine crackle glaze — plus glossy layered **lacquerware** and the indigo-dyed, cross-stitched **hill-tribe textiles** of the Hmong, Karen and Lahu, and you have a region that genuinely still makes things.

![Lanna handicrafts: meaningful Chiang Mai souvenirs](/blog/lanna-handicrafts-chiang-mai/visual.webp)

## Where to buy, and from whom

The easy answer is the **Walking Streets**. The [Saturday Walking Street](/blog/sunday-walking-street) runs right down **Wualai Road**, so you're buying silver in the silversmiths' own neighbourhood, often from the maker's stall. The Sunday street through the old city is bigger and broader — umbrellas, paper lamps, woodwork, textiles — and doubles as one of the city's best [night markets](/blog/night-markets-chiang-mai) for a wander with a snack in hand.

For the makers themselves, drive the **San Kamphaeng road**: Bo Sang for umbrellas, the weaving and celadon workshops strung along the highway, Ban Tawai for wood. Many let you watch production, and prices at source are usually kinder than in town. It pairs naturally with a soak at the [San Kamphaeng hot springs](/blog/san-kamphaeng-hot-springs) at the end of the road. Back in the city, **Warorot Market** (Kad Luang) is the unglamorous, brilliant option — a century-old market where bolts of [hill-tribe textile](/blog/hill-tribes-northern-thailand) and Hmong fabric remnants sell for a fraction of tourist-strip prices. And if you want your money to reach the village directly, fair-trade shops like Thai Tribal Crafts label each piece with the community that made it. For ceramics in particular, it's worth a [day trip to Lampang for its famous rooster bowls, horse carts and teak temples](/blog/lampang-day-trip) — the painted chicken bowl is one of Northern Thailand's most recognisable pieces of pottery.

## Buying well

A few honest tips. **Handmade has small imperfections** — a slightly uneven weave, a brush line that wobbles, a hammer mark — while mass-produced pieces are flawless and identical down the shelf. For silver, look for a "925" stamp on sterling; much of the cheap "silver" is alpaca alloy, which is fine if you know that's what you're paying for. Real **celadon** has that faint glaze crackle and a satisfying weight. And **sa paper** should feel fibrous and slightly irregular, never plasticky.

On price, expect roughly 150–400 THB for a small painted umbrella, a few hundred for a decent silk scarf, and more for serious silver or carved teak. Gentle bargaining is normal at markets and villages — ask the price, offer a little under, settle somewhere in the middle, and keep it friendly. A smile does most of the work; pushing hard for the last twenty baht reads as rude, and our [etiquette guide](/blog/thai-etiquette-for-visitors) is worth a glance before you start. Food and fixed-price fair-trade shops aren't haggled.

Whatever you carry home — a parasol, a hammered cup, a length of indigo cotton — you'll have something made by a pair of hands in this valley, not a factory across the world. That's the souvenir worth the suitcase space.
