It’s been a long time coming, but Wales is shaping up to become the first country in the UK to introduce a nationwide tourist tax.
13.11.2024 - 18:51 / cntraveler.com
“I first came to Rajasthan around 2012 and completely fell in love with the people, the way of life, and the colors,” says the English fashion designer Kim Jones, who has remained captivated by the indigos, shocking pinks, and oranges of the Indian state ever since. “I've always had a fascination with heritage craft, and that first trip inspired a love of Indian textiles and embroideries.” For Jones, sources of such inspiration extend to Rajasthani architecture—the palaces and the people who built them—as well as a wider “innate sense of style” found across India, “mixing utility, formality, and immaculate tailoring.” After a string of return trips, Jones found that hints of those design sensibilities and meticulous attention to detail had trickled down into his own work—accessories in particular, in which he says “the intricacy of maharaja style is reimagined into a modern graphic look.” Here, Jones shares the places he never leaves off his itinerary, including the spot for regional dishes like murgh tikka, his favorite market to source tie-dyed textiles, and a tented camp in the wilderness.
Taj Lake Palace in Udaipur
A piece from Jaipur's Gem Palace
“When I'm in Jaipur, I stay at Rambagh Palace, with its beautiful domed architecture. It was built in 1835 and served as the hunting lodge of the Maharaja of Jaipur—a real oasis within the city. I stay at the Taj Lake Palace in Udaipur, the iconic marble ‘floating’ hotel on the island of Jag Niwas in Lake Pichola, and wake up to the sound of peacocks crowing from its watery courtyards. My other favorites are Amanbagh, a modern, Mughal-style boutique resort in the Aravalli hills, and Aman-i-Khás, a tented wilderness camp where guests can hear animals moving around outside at night.”
“I always try to stop by the Gem Palace in Jaipur, a heritage store founded in 1852, which stocks the most gobstopping gemstones. My other must-visit is the women's craft market in Ranthambore, where shoppers can find anything from landscape paintings to fine silks and hand-loomed carpets. I love picking up textiles such as tie-dye items and shisha (mirrored) embroidery.”
A temple in Bhangarh
A Rajasthani thali in the dining room of Rambagh Palace
“One of my all-time favorite memories is of cycling around Rajgarh in the Alwar district, just seeing things at my own pace and going through villages such as Bhangarh, home to old Hindu temples. It's not so much about sightseeing as witnessing day-to-day life, and then watching the light change during golden hour, which is particularly magical in India.”
“My favorite building is Jaipur's Hawa Mahal, with its latticed windows and arched honeycomb exterior made from red and pink sandstone. I've also learned about Sawai Jai Singh II,
It’s been a long time coming, but Wales is shaping up to become the first country in the UK to introduce a nationwide tourist tax.
The UK's Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA) will soon apply to millions of international visitors.
India is firmly in the sights of a rapidly expanding Saudi low-cost airline. Flyadeal has ambitious plans to more than double the size of its fleet during the next four years. This will see it transform from a largely domestic airline to one with much greater international connectivity.
Nov 20, 2024 • 9 min read
Ukraine has fired the British-made Storm Shadow, a long-range cruise missile, at Russia for the first time, several media reported on Wednesday. Ukraine and Britain have not yet confirmed the reports.
Uber on Wednesday announced several new features geared toward those booking rides to and from the airport.
Billionaire Jeff Bezos appears to be selling one of his multimillion-dollar private jets.
United Airlines has brought back its popular discount for college-aged travelers — offering generous savings on select flights to Europe and India with no blackout dates.
I left my family, friends, and home state of Minnesota and moved abroad to the UK in 2016 in the name of love. My now ex-husband was British, and I'd finally been granted a spouse visa to live with him shortly after we eloped.
The sun was burning high and bright on a pellucid morning off Australia's Kimberley Coast when I stepped onto Ngula, more commonly known as Jar Island. The dull yellow of sand and sandstone contrasted with the vivid blue of the Timor Sea all around me. At my back was a rocky outcropping where millennia ago the island's traditional land owners, the Wunambal Gaambera people, lay their dead. Before me, a cluster of billion-year-old boulders contained clues about how they lived.
Olivia and her husband were on a romantic getaway. The couple had been finding it hard to “do anything spicy at home at all,” she said, what with their two teenage children around and the dirty laundry piling up. Escaping for a weekend in Venice at the end of the city’s annual carnival, in February, seemed like the perfect way to reconnect. But instead of a gondola ride or a canal-side dinner, their itinerary revolved around a masquerade ball and, possibly, sex with strangers.
As the winter holiday season approaches, an increasing number of Americans are setting their sights on Europe for a festive getaway this year, with Allianz Partners reporting a surge in trips planned to top European cities.