Tuesday, 15 July 2014

Fabric Shopping

I had it on good authority from a number of friends who have previously lived in or visited Ghana, that some of the best fun you can have in the country is having clothes made at a fraction of the price you would spend at home. A large part of the fun comes from browsing the many gorgeous batik fabrics on offer (patterned cloths made using wax to build up blocks of colour) for which Ghana is so famous. Find yourself a seamstress/tailor and ask them to recommend how much fabric you need for your particular items in advance of buying. As a rough guide (though this will very much depend on your size), two yards should make a shirt or skirt, two-three yards should make a short dress. For a very long dress you might need four yards, to be on the safe side.

Having had a seamstress recommended by one of my colleagues, and having a few items in mind, I decided to dedicate Saturday to fabric buying, so that I would have enough time to get everything made before leaving (it can take a seamstress around a week to make a dress, and then sometimes several fittings are then required to make sure the fit is perfect). I jumped in a tro-tro and headed into Old Accra.

If you take a tro-tro to Accra it is likely you are going to disembark at the chaos that is Tema Station. It’s a maze. It is probably better not to try and understand it, but just go with the flow. There are people absolutely everywhere, tro-tros everywhere and vendors all over the place selling all sorts. There is an overpowering smell of sweat, petrol, sewage and smoked fish, which you will find for sale just about everywhere, glistening in yellow oil.



At the far end of the station a small rocky path will take you out into a market place. Just about everything is on sale here and is worth taking a quick look around (though be warned people in this area do not approve of photo-taking). Keep moving quickly, though, or else you’ll be jostled to the side by ladies carrying enormous loads balanced on their heads. The market sells fruits, fish, homewares, basic provisions like toothpaste and washing up liquids, clothes, and just about everything else (in the tro-tro home the woman beside me had purchased an actual kitchen sink). There are also a fair few fabric stalls to browse, selling materials by the yard. These are good options for fabric buying if you only need a yard or two. However, for more choice head to Makola Market…which is just what I did.

Makola Market is a short walk away from Tema Station. It covers an enormous area and is made up of both outdoor stalls and several blocks of shops. Again, just about everything you could need is on offer here. I was even confronted by a man selling rodent killer and who demonstrated his product’s effectiveness by waving in front of my face two dead mice tied up on a piece of string. Lovely.

Makola Market is centred around Makola Square. You’ll know it by the huge concrete arch in the middle (it looks a lot like half a giant McDonald’s “M”). Immediately around the big arch are lots of stalls selling clothing, bangles, soaps, homewares etc, as well as a few restaurants to sit and enjoy a drink when Makola gets too much. I passed a stall selling Christian music CDs. Strangely, rather than playing gospel, this particular stall was blasting Johnny Cash through its speakers. I’m not entirely convinced that “I shot a man in Reno, just to watch him die”, is entirely the Evangelical message!

If you pass through the big arch and through the square you will find yourself surrounded by shopping streets which, again, can be quite overwhelming. If you are after fabrics you want the shops directly in front of the square. Here you will find warehouses stacked from floor to ceiling with beautiful fabrics of every colour of the rainbow and every possible design.

I found myself browsing the warehouses for several hours, chatting away to all the salesladies as I went. One lady asked me if I would be interested in marrying her son; another asked me my Twi name;* another explained to me all about funeral fabrics;** and another, on discovering I was British, proceeded to ask me just why the Queen refused to abdicate and made it quite clear she hadn’t been a fan of the royal family since the death of Princess Di.

After several hours of browsing and chatting I finally settled on a selection of fabrics with which I intend to make a couple of dresses and a trouser suit. If you do buy fabrics in Makola, be aware that most of the stuff on offer at the warehouses (where you will get by far the biggest selection) are wholesale only. This means you’ll have to buy a minimum of six yards of each piece. There are a few places selling by the single yard but with nowhere near as big a selection. Given the choice on offer, I would advise buying direct from the wholesaler. Six yards comes in at around 30-35 cedis (around £6-7). If you buy per yard, this is normally around 10 cedis (£2) per yard anyway, and if you need 3 yards for a dress, buying in bulk from the wholesaler doesn’t cost you too much more.

For anyone who wants to shop in a more relaxed atmosphere, free from smoked fish and mice on string, there are a couple of places in Osu that you could try. Woodin’s on Oxford Street stocks a range of high quality fabrics and readymade items. You can also find some very beautiful designs in a small store in Oxford Street Mall. Sarah’s Fabrics on 15th Street, just off Oxford Street (opposite the petrol station at the northern end) doesn’t stock batik, but is a good place to pick up lining and also raw silk in a variety of colours, should African print not be your thing.

* In Ghana, many people are named according to the day on which they were born. I was born on a Friday, so my Twi name is Efia.

** When someone dies, it is customary to have a whole new outfit made for the funeral, typically in the colours red and black.

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