In wintry Peshawar, Chitral’s woolly hats sell like hot cakes

Special In wintry Peshawar, Chitral’s woolly hats sell like hot cakes
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A shop full of Chitrali apparel in Peshawar’s famous Chitrali bazaar. Dec. 6, 2019 (AN photo)
Special In wintry Peshawar, Chitral’s woolly hats sell like hot cakes
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A craftsman at Peshawar’s Chitral Bazaar stitches together a traditional woollen hat. Dec. 6, 2019 (AN photo)
Special In wintry Peshawar, Chitral’s woolly hats sell like hot cakes
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Shop owner and craftsmen, Muhammad Tayyab, in his shop at Peshawar’s Chitral Bazaar. Dec. 6, 2019 (AN photo)
Special In wintry Peshawar, Chitral’s woolly hats sell like hot cakes
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A mechanic displays sewing machine parts in Peshawar’s famous Chitrali bazaar. Dec. 6, 2019 (AN photo)
Special In wintry Peshawar, Chitral’s woolly hats sell like hot cakes
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A mechanic displays sewing machine parts in Peshawar’s famous Chitrali bazaar. Dec. 6, 2019 (AN photo)
Special In wintry Peshawar, Chitral’s woolly hats sell like hot cakes
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Craftsmen and shop owner, Abdul Waheed, takes a customer’s head measurements in his shop in Peshawar’s famous Chitrali bazaar. Dec. 6, 2019. (AN photo)
Special In wintry Peshawar, Chitral’s woolly hats sell like hot cakes
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In between customers, shopkeepers at Peshawar’s Chitrali bazaar drink traditional green tea. Dec. 6, 2019 (AN Photo)
Special In wintry Peshawar, Chitral’s woolly hats sell like hot cakes
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A craftsman stitches a Chitrali hat at his shop in Peshawar’s famous Chitrali bazaar. Dec. 6, 2019 (AN photo)
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Traditional Chitrali woollen hats stacked one on top of the other and ready for sale in Peshawar’s famous Chitrali bazaar. Dec. 6, 2019 (AN photo)
Updated 07 December 2019
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In wintry Peshawar, Chitral’s woolly hats sell like hot cakes

In wintry Peshawar, Chitral’s woolly hats sell like hot cakes
  • A special Chitrali woollen hat takes hours of meticulous handcrafting
  • Recent visit of Duke and Duchess of Cambridge to Chitral has boosted countrywide sales

PESHAWAR: Every winter, the traditional wool apparel business in Peshawar’s historic Chitral bazaar begins to boom.
The bazaar was first established by shopkeepers from the scenic upper Chitral region, from the extreme northwest of Pakistan, in the late 1940s. It is famous around the country for its expertly crafted handmade woolen hats, waistcoats, long coats and cloaks.
With roughly 500 shops, most of the people working in the bazaar are from Chitral and speak their native language, Khowar. But having adapted to the needs of their business and customers in Peshawar, they also speak Pashto.




Abdul Waheed stitches a traditional Chitrali hat in his shop in Peshawar’s famous Chitrali bazaar. Dec. 6, 2019. (AN photo)

Abdul Waheed, a shop-owner from upper Chitral said he’s been in the business of Chitrali hats for 20 years. A single Chitrali hat of pure wool, he said, took hours of meticulous crafting.
“A normal hat can be made in even an hour,” Waheed shrugged. “But a special one takes at least four hours.”
“I sit in the same shop of the Chitrali Bazaar where my father sat before me. I’ve been making these Chitrali hats for decades,” Waheed, 45, told Arab News.
“After the recent visit of the British royal couple, the sale of the traditional Chitrali headgear has risen,” he added and said these days, there was a demand for his warm hats from other cities in Pakistan as well.




Craftsmen and shop owner, Abdul Waheed, takes a customer’s head measurements in his shop in Peshawar’s famous Chitrali bazaar. Dec. 6, 2019. (AN photo)

The price of the handmade hats in the bazaar varies according to the design and quality, and ranges from between Rs. 500 ($3.20) to Rs. 2000 ($12.92). 
Waheed said that due to the high quality of the handmade products, people from neighboring Afghanistan also used Chitrali woolen products, and visiting European tourists took a special interest in purchasing from the historic bazaar. 
In the past, celebrities and royals who have visited Chitral have received the Chitrali hats as gifts, with iconic photographs of Hollywood actor Robert De Niro, Princess Diana and others in the traditional headgear now a part of the region’s documented history.




The packed Chitrali bazaar in Peshawar, bustling with shopkeepers and customers. Dec. 6, 2019. (AN Photo)

Sadiq Amin, 54, President of the Chitral business community in Peshawar said he was one of the first few shopkeepers in the bazaar and had been associated with the business since 1980.
He said the traditional Chitrali hat season started in November and continued until March, and reiterated that following the royal visit of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge to Chitral last month, the demand for Chitrali hats had risen with orders pouring in from around the country.