What We Are Buying Today: Thaqeb, a Saudi brand

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Updated 06 November 2025
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What We Are Buying Today: Thaqeb, a Saudi brand

As the Kingdom celebrates the Year of Handicrafts, Thaqeb, a Saudi brand from the Eastern Province, is bringing locally inspired products into the spotlight.

Founded in 2020 by four design graduates from Imam Abdulrahman bin Faisal University — Aseel Alhussaini, Sarah Alghamdi, Raghad Sendi and Farah Aldossery — the brand fills a gap in the market for contemporary, sustainable Saudi souvenirs that blend tradition with modern, eco-conscious design.

All Thaqeb products are sourced and made locally, supporting Saudi artisans while keeping environmental impact low through short supply chains.

From Thaqeb Studio, the all-women team turned a university project into a purpose-driven business. Three of the founders still work in the Eastern Province, while one has moved to Riyadh. The brand is growing, welcoming new designers and launching fresh collections.

At the Ithra Winter Festival, held alongside Khobar Season, Thaqeb’s popup booth drew attention with its elegant, locally inspired display.

Their Asir Mountain tote bags, made in Riyadh, come in three designs — one in blue and two with subtle color variations — priced at SR125 ($33). The canvas totes feature vegan leather straps and roomy interiors, combining practicality with local design.

Thaqeb is also known for its cups, which were available at the booth. In 2022, the brand won an award for its cup design, further boosting its reputation in the local design scene.

Another hit is the Arabian Leopard collection of bag accessories, created to mark the birth of leopard cubs in AlUla — a milestone in conservation efforts. The collection features vibrant editions, including Leopard Green for Saudi National Day and a pink version for Breast Cancer Awareness Month.

The brand regularly takes part in Ithra events, including Eid celebrations. At the Ithra Winter Souq, their booth accepts cash or certain digital payments, but not Apple Pay, so it is best to have Ithra WiFi or reliable data if going cashless.

Check their Instagram @thaqeb.products for more details and products.


Inside Sara Naim’s ‘From the Perspective of Language’ show in Dubai

Updated 6 min 19 sec ago
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Inside Sara Naim’s ‘From the Perspective of Language’ show in Dubai

DUBAI: Here are three highlights from Sara Naim’s ‘From the Perspective of Language,’ running March 4 to April 7 at The Third Line in Dubai. 

‘Skin 5’

This is the Syrian artist’s fourth solo exhibition at The Third Line, and includes a new video performance — “Mother Practices Her Tongue” — which “abstracts the Arabic language into gestures and sounds that no longer produce coherent meaning.” Together with the show’s large-scale works such as this one, it “extends Naim’s ongoing investigation into how meaning is constructed through inherited systems such as language, symbols and ideology,” the press release states.

‘A Chickpea, Hummus’

This is one of the more figurative paintings on display in “From the Perspective of Language,” and an example of how Naim uses “arrangements of symbolically charged imagery” to “examine boundaries and the limits of representation,” the catalogue explains. The show as a whole “asks how meaning is constructed and imposed, and where intuition and effect persist beyond formal systems of representation.”

‘Skin 8’

The series of paintings titled “Skin” are inspired by Naim’s “interest in body tattoos as markers of belief systems” and “treat skin as both subject and medium, with the canvas functioning as a porous surface onto which images are layered,” the catalogue states. “By leaving space for interpretation, the paintings invite viewers to actively construct meaning — a process reflecting Kant’s idea that understanding arises not from objects themselves, but through engagement (with them).”