Customers viewing silk handloom saris at the ‘Hathkargha Mela (State Handloom Expo 2026)’ at Shilparamam in Tirupati.
| Photo Credit: K.V. POORNACHANDRA KUMAR
As Tirupati’s Shilparamam also has a wedding-cum-convention hall abutting its premises, the event turned out to be an effective crowd puller. This apart, the footfall is also high because of the devotees visiting the Tiruchanur Sri Padmavati Ammavari temple.
The event, which was inaugurated on February 22 by A.P. Yadava Corporation Chairman G. Narasimha Yadav, A.P. State Greenery and Beautification Corporation chairperson M. Sugunamma and A.P. Nayi Brahmin Corporation chairman Rudrakoti Sadasiva, has been registering steady inflow of visitors.
Around 64 artisan groups are from the Telugu States, and the remaining hail from Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Jammu & Kashmir, Delhi, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, and Jharkhand.
Customers, especially women, are making a beeline to the stalls selling the ethnic Kashmiri, Bagalpuri, Pollachi, and Venkatagiri saris. The wooden toy makers from Settigunta, ‘Thella Jilledu’ Ganesh idol makers, imitation jewellery sets from Visakhapatnam are also making good business at the expo. The expo ends on March 7.
Meanwhile, even though the Union government-sponsored exhibitions were conducted across Tirupati, Guntur, Visakhapatnam, and Kakinada in 2025, the Tirupati event alone bagged an impressive footfall of nearly 2 lakh visitors last year.
Published – March 03, 2026 07:12 pm IST