Following fashion in Cambodia
Do you follow fashion trends in Cambodia? Every country and every culture has its own dress code. As far as you are concerned, have you changed the way you dress?
Can one easily find fashion boutiques in Cambodia? Are clothes expensive there? Or cheap?
What do Cambodians usually wear or like to wear the most?
Share your experience!
Priscilla
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by not following fashion I mean that I do not wear Mango and Zara, per example, which i normally wear back home, but rather I tend to wear the indian printed shalwars from toul toum poung, some cheap tshirts from sovanna mall and basically whatever fits , and slippers. .
i dress shabby and careless, because it's basically dirt, dust, heat, pouring all of a sudden, and crappy transportation..
oh, and yes, being well dressed attracts unnecessary attention, gets you mugged in the middle of the day, and overcharged mostly everywhere, so showing off is just stupid. .
聽 聽That聽 always聽 me聽 . my style, any where聽 i go, their聽 remark or聽 聽remember me. .
聽 that聽 the聽 way聽 聽 i am.
I've moved out in 2015.
I was a fashion design teacher at Raffles,聽 IT professor of Esthetics and typography at Zaman University and managing a fashion design training school.
Interesting
)I design fashion items, yes,聽 however, I keep a low profile and prefer to not draw unwanted attention. I design prototypes and develop manufacturing techniques, in spite of all odds i'm not that sociable

PS** according to your observation, which would be some of the fashion trends going on around you ?
Priscilla wrote:Hi everyone,
Do you follow fashion trends in Cambodia? Every country and every culture has its own dress code. As far as you are concerned, have you changed the way you dress?
Can one easily find fashion boutiques in Cambodia? Are clothes expensive there? Or cheap?
What do Cambodians usually wear or like to wear the most?
Share your experience!
Priscilla
Hi Pricilla,
1. Do you follow trends..
Ans: No I don't but I do see some patterns
2.Have I changed...
Ans: Yes, I took a liking of the Kroma because it comes in handy when I am driving my moto and I don't want to inhale the fumes and the dusts in PP. It can become a bag, a sun protector etc.
3.Can one easily....
Ans: There are fashion boutiques all right but most of the time they sell China knock offs. Lately known brands have opened stand alone stores in PP. Also better boutiques have sprouted in malls like AEON. The branded ones are expensive because of logistical problems. However you can opt for class A knock-offs which really looks like the original. I bought a fake聽 Dunhill satchel bag for 50 dollars but the material was real cow leather at the mall near Central Market. It's been 4 years and it's still with me. Now if you can wear cheap clothes from China, Thailand, Bangladesh and Cambodia, then they have tons of it. SUper cheap! You can find it everywhere, markets, night markets, fairs, malls. Oh BTW, there are times when they sell factory rejects of branded clothes. BTW, I am sure you know already that the kingdom has a lot of garment factories that supply globally popular cloth brands...
5. What do Cambodians usually wear or like to wear the most?
Ans: I noticed patterns in how people wear clothes in Cambodia.
1. Poor men who work in some form of authority like to use military clothes or military styled clothes, e.g., motorcycle parking attendant types.
2. Old rich men聽 who has business or has a high position in the government like to wear white long sleeved shirt that is lightly striped with thin blue lines, a gold pen tucked on his right shirt pocket. Wears a signature belt like Gucci (could be fake or original), a light khaki plaid pants and a good pair of black leather shoes.
3. Young women prefer Kpop style of clothing, some boys are following the trend too. Ditto with haircuts.
4. Men usually wear tailored shirts and pants. Clothes are cut and tailored to follow the body and then they pair it with sandals. This is very usual.
5.聽 Most people wear long sleeved clothes, probably because its dusty and the fear of people to become tanned. it think for most Khmers having a light skin is more fashionable.
6. The masses, both men and women still wear this traditional cloth worn by men and women as skirts.
7. The Kroma, that all purpose cloth that they usually hang around their necks (I don't know if its the right spelling), is still used by most of the masses.
8. There are fashion boutiques all right but most of the time they sell China knock offs. Lately known brands have opened stand alone stores in PP.
9.
Aaliyah01 wrote:hahaha, yes lol, glad to bring a smile, It is my job simply because it is a hobby to create and I do need money to survive therefore I need a job, so luckily I can have both
)
I design fashion items, yes,聽 however, I keep a low profile and prefer to not draw unwanted attention. I design prototypes and develop manufacturing techniques, in spite of all odds i'm not that sociable
PS** according to your observation, which would be some of the fashion trends going on around you ?
That makes sense regarding unwanted attention. So i am confused. are you into fashion or not? lol
I live in Brooklyn,NY...聽 capital of the world!! But I suppose a NY'r would say that right?
Unsure about fashion trends.. .. This is NYC... it ranges.

Thanks
I left the Kingdom already, but I plan to comeback soon.聽 Yes I do have a blog and I just started, but I have yet to write about my Cambodian sojourn. Actually I just started. My first blog...
Anyway, there is something I'd like to raise. I feel like most of those who posted here seem ignorant as to how culture works and lack the understanding of the anthropological truth that no culture is better than another and that all things palpable in a culture arises because of a group of people's interaction with their environment. Every culture is unique, not one is superior over the other.
Those folks who posted pejoratively should try wearing layered clothing in PP and see what happens. So what if people in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos wear pajamas in public? It is light, it is cool, it is cheap and the prints reflect the tropical setting of these countries- sunshiny, colorful, cute, happy. For them, it works, who are we to underestimate their concept of fashion. Besides, we do know that there is so much poverty in Cambodia,聽 for the usual Khmers, catching up with the concept of contemporary "fashion" is the least of their concern, they need food on their table, education for their children and any sort of shelter for the family.
Just because these countries are poorer than where most of us came from does not mean that their concept of fashion/culture is inferior than ours. In short, that is how Cambodia rolls, you just have to respect it.
Just saying, Cambodia is rich in culture and its people, proud of who they are despite what happened to them. We all benefitted from that county (if indeed, you lived there and did not just passed through) , the last thing we can do is ridicule them because of our ignorance.
I might sound very emphatic, but I am not. I am just expressing my sentiment.
Thanks for the reply to my post Aaliyah
. Are you wearing a hajib?With regret to your confusion, though I find it hilariously contagious, I am not following the masses, aka trends, when it comes to wearing fashionable items in Cambodia!
Yes, it is hijab.
That's cool to know that you are wearing a hijab. When I was in Indonesia, I saw beautiful hijabs worn by the ladies there. The lady Chams in the kingdom also have fashionable hijabs. Have you seen them? I had a number of Cham friends in PP because I lived in the Chruy Chang Var area. I used to frequent a Bai Char/ Mi Char Halal restaurant there. The place faced the Tonle Sap boulevard. I loved how they made their聽 bai char moist and spicy.聽

Your style iss light, informative and articulate, it has everything it takes to be great!
yes, some are pretty, but poverty is too loud and draws back consistently..
With flipflops, you'd be blending-in with the locals and the backpackers, sandals too.
Enjoy.it's as Jerby said, here , flip flops or sandals are the norm, and they can be easily found聽 if your shoe size is an average 36-37, larger sizes are difficult to find, or quite impossible for anywhere above 40.
Meanwhile, I am trying to figure out travel equipment such as backpack vs rolling carry-on and which vaccine shots to get, sure seems to be a variation of opinion. My friend traveled for a month last year through Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam, Laos and Myanmar without any immunization shots while my two brothers did them all, except yellow fever. I am scared to get any.聽 And since I live in the tropics most of my clothing is for hot, humid climate but how easy is it to launder there or is it better to bring extra.
it is very easy to launder, there are many places who provide laundry cleaning services,
I personally didn't get any vaccine shots, and I do not know anyone who did either, I lived there for 3 years and a half, I was alright.
I would remind you that the initial topic here is "Following Fashion in Cambodia". If you have other questions, please start a new thread on the forum.
Thank you,
Christine
大咖福利影院
didn't realize we cannot go off topic..聽 what are we? 14 years old??聽
obv i am being sarcastic but you get my point no?
ok.. i am being sarcastic... you will not be in trouble. your message will be moved to the "appropriate" thread
i still say Pajamas
blending in is a good idea, be comfortable too.
it is a bit difficult for someone like my self to blend in though. if i am in the provinces everyone will be staring at me. in PP i just look like another Ausie.
fashion would be a bad mistake for me, maybe better to look the opposite.
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