From thobes to trims, Jeddah shops gear up for Eid rush

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Eid shopping is in full swing, as shoppers flock to stores to buy new clothes, gifts, chocolates and other items in preparation of festivities. (SPA)
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Regardless of the price hikes, barbershops are attracting more and more customers. (AN photo)
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Eid shopping is in full swing, as shoppers flock to stores to buy new clothes, gifts, chocolates and other items in preparation of festivities. (AN photo)
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Eid shopping is in full swing, as shoppers flock to stores to buy new clothes, gifts, chocolates and other items in preparation of festivities. (AN photo)
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Updated 08 April 2024
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From thobes to trims, Jeddah shops gear up for Eid rush

  • Salah Darwish, the manager of a shop in Al-Rawdah district, told Arab News that the demand for chocolate and traditional sweets served during Eid was at its peak

JEDDAH: As Eid Al-Fitr approaches, tailoring shops, chocolate stores and barber shops in the Kingdom are doing brisk business as a large number of customers visit them ahead of the Eid Al-Fitr celebrations.

Jeddah’s traditional marketplace for thobe — the traditional Saudi attire — in Al-Baghdadia is buzzing with activity as vendors and tailors cater to the surge in demand for custom-made clothing.

Men, along with their children, flock to tailor shops for new thobes, while some shops have almost reached the maximum number of orders that they can deliver before Eid holidays. Some others will continue to receive orders until the last day of Ramadan, so will extend their working hours and increase the number of tailors in all shifts.




Eid shopping is in full swing, as shoppers flock to stores to buy new clothes, gifts, chocolates and other items in preparation of festivities. (SPA)

Usually, shops in areas such as Al-Tahlia and other popular souqs charge more for their services but customers are not deterred by the high prices.

“It is very difficult for me and my boys to change our tailor as he knows exactly what we want. Paying something like SR400 ($107) for one piece is nothing compared to having the right thobe for Eid,” said Mansour Al-Noamaan, who was trying to convince his tailor in Al-Bughdadya market to finish his thobes before Eid.

Mohammed Ali, a tailor, shared with Arab News that they have been very busy with orders during Ramadan, with their workload extending late into the night to fulfill customer demands before Eid.

FASTFACTS

• Besides thobes, chocolate and barber shops, the market for leather sandals and perfumes is also booming.

• Barber shops are attracting more customers and staying open for long hours to handle the great demand.

“It is OK with us because this is the best season for us, but the problem is those who come at the last minute and order new thobes,” he said.

Justifying the rise in prices, Ali said that it is a temporary measure taken to limit the number of customers as they have to follow a tight delivery schedule during this season.

Meanwhile, sweets-shop vendors in Jeddah seem to be less worried, as they are prepared to meet the big demand. Salah Darwish, the manager of a shop in Al-Rawdah district, told Arab News that the demand for chocolate and traditional sweets served during Eid was at its peak.




Eid shopping is in full swing, as shoppers flock to stores to buy new clothes, gifts, chocolates and other items in preparation of festivities. (SPA)

“In the last three days of Ramadan, customers start to flock to sweet stores because buying sweets for Eid is a necessity,” he said.

Munira Al-Harbi visited the shop with her children after a long day of shopping. “We are here to buy chocolate because what is Eid without chocolate? Traditionally, we present chocolate to visitors during Eid, in addition to Saudi coffee,” she said.

On the other hand, barbershops are also busy throughout the Kingdom with customers flocking to them to look their best during the Eid Al-Fitr holidays.

Due to the huge turnout of customers, barbershop owners have increased their service charges from the normal rate and are already taking advanced bookings.

Regardless of the price hikes, barbershops are attracting more and more customers. They open for long hours to be able to handle the great demand.

According to Oskan Najala, a Turkish barber in Jeddah, customers pay double the amount they spend during ordinary days to make themselves look good for Eid. He said that just three days before Eid they made the necessary preparations to receive more customers, employing additional workers to accommodate the demand.

“Eid night is the golden night for us as barbers where we operate for 24 hours,” he said.

“A new haircut for us is a must before Eid and part of the tradition,” said Walid Turkistani, a 39-year-old Saudi father of two.

While, Abdullah Ba Othman, an employee in Jeddah, said that going to the barbershop before Eid has been a significant part of preparations for the celebrations because Eid is the right time for many to restore their look. “It is as important as buying new clothes, shoes and other things.”

According to Ba Othman, a normal visit to barbershops costs him SR100 for all sorts of grooming treatments, but this Eid his barber told him it will cost him about SR300.

Besides thobes, chocolate and barber shops, the market for leather sandals and perfumes is also booming.

 


Young photographer highlights Qatif’s natural springs

Updated 10 December 2025
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Young photographer highlights Qatif’s natural springs

RIYADH: Young photographer Redha Al-Hammad is documenting the fading natural springs of Qatif, a landscape shaped by water for thousands of years, before their stories disappear.

His new project, “O Breaker of the Louz,” captures the cultural memory surrounding the springs that once sustained one of the oldest settlements in the Arabian Peninsula.

Alhammad, a 20-year-old visual artist from Qatif and student at the American University of Sharjah, developed the project to preserve his hometown’s identity and share its untold narratives.

Qatif’s springs once fueled its agricultural prosperity, nourished date-palm droves, supported early communities, and served as fathering spaces for trade, social life and storytelling. Today, only one spring — Ayn Al-Labbani — still flows.

With limited written research available, Al-Hammad relied on oral histories from relatives and community elders.

“The good thing about being from a small city is that everyone knows everyone,” he told Arab News. “The stories that we hear … that our parents and our older family members tell us … a lot of the time they can kind of … get drowned out.”

One of his key sources was Abdulrasul Al-Gheryafi, an English teacher and local historian who grew up swimming in the springs and has long studied their disappearance. His firsthand accounts shaped the project and provided the folktale that inspired its title.

Al-Hammad began photographing at Ayn Al-Labbani, where locals still gather. He initially “had no idea” what the work would become until Al-Gheryafi shared the tale of a knight who encountered a mysterious voice while at a spring. The project became centered on the idea that springs are more than water sources; they are magical spaces embedded with communal memory and identity.

Al-Hammad wrote a poem based on the story to accompany the images and express what photography alone could not.

What started out as field notes for his research naturally formed as poetic lines, which luckily earned the seal of approval from poet, friend and collaborator Dalia Mustafa.

“Seeing her develop as a writer as well, that helped me come to terms with what poetry could be within the context of photographic work,” he said.

The project blends documentary photography with lyrical elements, a technique Al-Hammad first explored in “Mahanet” (“Did you not yearn for me?”), created with Mustafa during the Jameel Arts Centre Youth Assembly.

Told through low-contrast, dreamlike images, “Mahanet” maps memories, grief and changing landscapes in Qatif.

“I kind of recreated this experience that I had with my dad whenever I would go back home and he would drive me around,” Al-Hammad said, recounting how his father would explain how a sea once existed where there is now a residential area, or which streets were once fields of palm trees.

His second project, “L3eeb” (“Player”), developed under the Kingdom Photography Award, examines the role of football in transforming overlooked spaces into communal “third spaces” for Saudi youth.

Al-Hammad was mentored by photographer, visual artist and photo book publisher Roi Saade, whose guidance he describes as invaluable: “It fit perfectly, the pairing, because he works in kind of the same realm of narrative-based work. And he was with me every step of the way.

“The Kingdom Photography Award program is very important for people like me who are at the early stages of their artistic journey and have something to say, would definitely benefit from having a platform and … the kind of guidance and mentorship that the professionals around me provided.”

All Al-Hammad’s work centers on his hometown, Qatif. Initially, his photography was personal, helping him reconnect with home after years abroad. Over time, he expanded his focus to share Qatif’s culture and heritage with wider audiences, emphasizing the region has as rich and vibrant a voice as other parts of the Kingdom. 

Al-Hammad and Mustafa plan to turn “Mahanet” into a book next year, continuing their collaboration. 

Citing Saudi Arabia’s rich cultural diversity, Al-Hammad hopes similar opportunities expand to other artistic mediums. Through his work, he seeks to inspire others to document their communities, preserve local heritage and contribute to a broader understanding of the Kingdom’s identity.