Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Blending Chic and Comfort


The Moroccan style encompasses a blend of elaborately crafted furniture, uniquely designed decor and rich colors for an atmosphere reminiscent of the traditional Moroccan decor. From silky fabrics and decorative poufs to handcrafted lanterns and beautiful large mirrors, there are many ways you can create a unique and intimate atmosphere with elements of Morocco.


Moroccan style mirrors are often elaborately carved and present a sense of luxury to any room. The mirror frames themselves are created from a range of materials including wood, steel, iron and even ceramic tiles. Place them in entryways and living rooms to create a brighter and more open feeling design. Different colored frames can complement your theme and can range from golds to reds, colors very common throughout the culture.



Moroccan decor can also be characterized through plant decor. Not only do they add a fresh characteristic to your atmosphere, but the greens are charming accents to your interior decoration. Much of the color scheme of Moroccan style blends a variety of colors including greens, reds, yellows, blues and oranges for a rich and stylish feel.


Moroccan interior decor creates a refuge that feels inviting, warm and sensual. Enhanced by rich room colors and unique Moroccan design ideas that include Moroccan style mirrors, fabrics and furniture your home decorating will look stylish and feel very comfortable.


At Treasures of Morocco, we sell authentic Moroccan decor that transforms your decor into a unique and intimate atmosphere. Visit our store at 655 Central Ave, St. Petersburg, Florida 33701, or order online and receive free shipping to all orders sent to the domestic U.S.

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

5 Reasons To Ditch Your Pots & Pans for a Tagine




The tagine is a unique piece of cooking equipment that no kitchen should be without. In fact, it’s so incredibly useful that you can create a variety of different meals without having to touch any other pot or pan in your kitchen. With vessels used for both cooking and serving, tagines offer a unique yet traditional way to cook any meal. Here are several reasons why we think you should ditch your pots and pans and purchase an exotic Moroccan tagine.


1. Tagine dishes are easy to throw together. They often include readily available ingredients that can all be tossed into one cooking vessel. You don’t have to worry about cleaning more than one dish and you can enjoy a flavorful meal that fits your taste.


2. A majority of tagine dishes incorporate olive oil, a healthy option that offers a variety of health benefits. Tagine dishes are not fried and use minimal oils and fats for a healthier dinner option.


3. Meals cooked in a tagine offer a unique earthy flavor that doesn’t hold true for meals cooked in a regular pot or pan. Its rich aroma brings a freshness to the dish, which offers an exotic take on your meals.


4. You can serve your meal in the same dish in which it’s cooked. If you prefer, there are many beautiful tagines that are created specifically for the purpose of serving rather than cooking.


5. Tagine dishes and their recipes have a history dating back centuries, which offers a traditional and cultural richness that is difficult to find in many dishes. It encompasses the Moroccan culture in both the dish and the method of cooking.

Tagines are a simple and functional piece that can be used to create your next exotic Moroccan meal. Make this piece of earthen cookware an integral part of your kitchen by purchasing a cooking or serving tagine at 655 Central Ave, St. Petersburg, Florida 33701, or by ordering online.

Monday, October 7, 2013

The Versatility of a Moroccan Kaftan


From a casual birthday party to an elaborate dinner occasion, the Moroccan kaftan becomes a versatile outfit perfect for any type of event. In Florida, the weather is generally perfect year around for a kaftan, which is a typically long sleeved and ankle-length dress adaptable for any occasion that can add an exotic touch to your wardrobe. It appeals to nearly all tastes, and possibly its greatest characteristic is that it can be worn in both hot climates and cooler conditions.

In its original form, kaftans are made from silk or cotton and worn with a sash or belt. Though traditionally long, kaftans also come in many shapes and sizes, can be worn long or short and often have chic jewels and beads embroidered in the fabric. More elaborately decorated kaftans are worn to special occasions like weddings for a timeless, traditional and exotic look.

Kaftans appeal to a variety of body shapes and sizes, flattering women with both curvy and slender builds. When you’re relaxing on the beach but decide to take a walk through the local boutiques and need a quick outfit, kaftans offer a versatile cover-up option that’s both chic and beautiful.

Moroccan kaftans are an essential part of Moroccan culture and history. The kaftan's presence in diverse cultures across a wide geographic area is a testament to its versatility and usefulness. Treasures of Morocco offers uniquely designed and elaborately crafted Moroccan kaftans that can be worn for nearly any occasion. Visit our store at 655 Central Ave, St. Petersburg, Florida 33701, or order online and receive free shipping to all orders sent to the domestic U.S.


You can check out our kaftan collection here





Thursday, October 3, 2013

Every Moroccan Lantern Is Unique



Moroccan lanterns come in a variety of different shapes, colors sizes and even materials. They offer a blend of elegance and antiquity that can give any room in your home a unique and exotic feel. Characteristics of every lantern differ, but detail comprises to create that exotic theme.

Colors
You’ll often see Moroccan lanterns designed using rich, deep colors ranging from reds and oranges to dark blues and greens. Some Henna lamps, which are a type of lantern created from goat skins, often have been colored with paprika and saffron dyes that add to its rustic look.

Textures
Moroccan lanterns are made from a variety of materials, including brass, metal, iron and glass. As mentioned before, goat skins are commonly used to create Henna lamps and lamp shades. Textured glass used for many lanterns also creates a softer light compared to non-textured glass.

Sconces
Sconces are another type of Moroccan lantern that lays flush on your wall. They are perfect for adding decorative and subtle lighting to a hallway, or perhaps a bathroom. Sconces can be made from glass or, like Henna lamps, with goat skins.

Lanterns
Lantern style lamps are made from stained glass and deeply tinted, often with decorative textures. They often elude elaborate shadows and patterns that add a special ambiance to the room.


Moroccan lanterns can be used as a decorative piece hung from the ceiling or as centerpiece in any room. Lanterns come in a variety of shapes, colors and sizes and add character to any area of your home. At Treasures of Morocco, we sell authentic Moroccan lanterns that transform your decor. Visit our store at 655 Central Ave, St. Petersburg, Florida 33701, or order online and receive free shipping to all orders sent to the domestic U.S.


Sunday, September 29, 2013

Caftan: the pride of Moroccan women

Kaftan: the pride of Moroccan women

youssef sourgo
Article by  in Morocco World News
Kaftan: the pride of Moroccan women
Casablanca- “Many inspiring women have shown me how such a garment is created somewhere between fantasy and reality,” wrote Sonia Maria in an article of hers published on NJAL, an online fashion platform.
The “garment” that Maria refers to is the Moroccan majestic dress, the Kaftan. Her description flawlessly matches the proprieties of this charming Moroccan attire. Between “fantasy” and “reality,” the Kaftan stands out as a composite amalgamation of subtle and luxurious fabrics, composite designs and shapes, and an artist’s personal perspective of women’s beauty and femininity.
1To start, the Kaftan is to be distinguished from the Djellaba.The latter is traditionally recognized for featuring a hood, whereas the former does not. The Kaftan is basically a hoodless Djellaba. For it is commonly worn during special occasions, the Kaftan tends to be more elaborate and intricate in its designs than the Djellaba. This however does not undermine the uniqueness of the Moroccan Djellaba,which has also gained a new air of modernity by contemporary fashion designers. Hence both the Kaftan and the Djellaba are now almost at the same scale of sophistication and modernity.is agreeable that both Moroccan dresses might sometimes look almost selfsame in terms of form and constituents. However, Takchita distinctively comes in a double-layered design: a dress blanketed by a Kaftan-like robe. Equally, however, both Kaftan and Takchita are worn for special occasions, though Kaftan comes comparatively more composite in its colors, designs and patterns for it is also a traditional wedding dress. Nevertheless, there exist simpler and less elaborate versions of Kaftan.
A bridal garment par excellence, the Moroccan Kaftan is traditionally recognized for being a long-sleeved, front-buttoned robe, traditionally opened at the front.  Made up either of silk or cotton, alongside many other newly introduced fabrics, the Kaftan tends to be embroidered with braids at different parts of it. It comes also with detailed and coherent patterns and lustrous colors. This enchanting dress that fascinates all women around the world, as astounding as it may sound, is traditionally hand-made. This reverberates Morocco’s highly professional and unique artisans and designers.
Looking in retrospect at Kaftan’s history, we travel back into time to the epoch of the Ottoman Empire. The Kaftan in that era was reflective of the person’s hierarchical rank and position in relation to the Sultan. The Kaftan worn by those women in the entourage of the sultan was unquestionably distinct from that worn by ordinary women. The higher the rank of the wearer was, evidently, the more elaborate and embellished was her Kaftan, and vice versa.
When the Kaftan reached Morocco, however, it has gained a different air and signification. Worn both as a casual and formal attire, depending on the complexity of its design, the Moroccan Kaftan has been more symbolic of women’s delicate taste in traditional clothes. Brides have also worn it during their weddings to accentuate their beauty and femininity.11
The Moroccan artisan and designer has been recognized by his impressive ability to match women’s descriptions and expectations with the final product. He even sometimes stupefies them by his personal perspective, stemming from his know-how and experience of what magnifies women’s beauty and femininity in Moroccan dresses.
After Kaftan had reached Morocco, it encapsulated the country’s cultural richness and complexity. Morocco repainted the originally Ottoman attire with colors from its mosaic of identities and cultural particularities. The Moroccan Kaftan speaks different languages and is representative of a plethora of Moroccan sub-identities, which in turn form its one and monolithic identity.
The love relationship between the Moroccan Kaftan and its weareris beyond the banalities of price and occasion. The relationship starts at first sight, when the woman sees the design/tissue, and endures until her body meets the Kaftan’s fabric. At that very instant, the Kaftanremolds to match its wearer’s sense of femininity and beauty. It accentuates the woman’s outer beautiful traits and discloses her inner delicateness and fineness. Basically, it matches her personality and speaks her mind.
As when the Moroccan  Kaftan is worn by a non-Moroccan woman, it discovers her own femininity and adds a Moroccan breath to it. I would dare to say that it unveils the ‘Moroccan dimension’ of every non-Moroccan woman’s body. What else, then, could be more enchanting than rediscovering a new facet of what makes a woman distinctively beautiful?
When it comes to modernity, and just as I exemplified in a previous article (Salma Kaftan design), the traditional Moroccan Kaftan captivatingly immixes in the chemistry of the traditional and the modern. Salma has been one example of how only Moroccan designers have this idiosyncratic ability to preserve the traditional Kaftan’s majesty while injecting a breath of modernity and occidental topicalities.
The Moroccan Kaftan continues to be an important constituent of Morocco’s cultural identity. Kaftan is the pride of every Moroccan woman. It symbolizes her simplicity and her sophistication; her femininity and beauty; her cheeriness and delicacy; and her mesmerizingly colorful and open mind.
Women around the world are now considering the Moroccan dress more of a universal attire that matches all and every distinctive criteria of beauty and high quality worldwide. The Moroccan Kaftan stands up as sempiternal dress that gains more sumptuously with time to endure and compete even in an age of revolutionary fashion and design.

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Leather Henna Candle Holders





 The henna candle holder are handmade from goat skin stretched over a firm iron frame, tattooed with henna paste by using Moroccan art designs. They are made as such to reflect a soft glowing light, by adding a superb value to the decoration factor. The henna candle holders Will compliment room or garden by burning your favorite tea light or small candle.

Check out our site for a complimentary free shipping yes FREE SHIPPING nation wide :

https://treasuresofmorocco.com/shop/?slug=index.php&cPath=46_86

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

How To Cure a Tagine



WHY CURE A TAGINE?
Curing clay pots is as cultural as the cooking itself. If you look up curing clay pots, you will find a variety of processes using a multitude of ingredients ranging from spinach to buttermilk to mustard oil. In order to strengthen (less susceptible to thermal shock) your cooking tagine and get optimum taste that tagine lovers seek at every use, it is necessary to use the process explained below. The use of olive oil has a dual effect. It is as important for sealing clay as it is for flavoring Moroccan cooking. 


HOW TO CURE A TAGINE?
It is necessary that it is seasoned before initial use. Please follow these simple instructions below for maximum results:

1. WATER: The new tagine needs to be first submerged in water for at least 1 hour. If you can’t submerge it, place it in a clean sink bowl and slowly fill the base of the tagine with water until it stops absorbing it. Place the tagine lid on top and fill it as well. Let stand for 30 minutes to allow full absorption of water into the clay. Empty excess water and set to dry for 5 minutes.


2. OLIVE OIL: All you need is 3 table spoons of olive oil, 2 for the base and one for the lid. Spread the olive oil throughout the base and lid with your hand.


3: HEAT: While the tagine is still wet with the oil applied to it, place it in the oven as shown in the first or second photos, and set temperature at 350 F and leave for 45 minutes. The evaporation of moisture creates a vacuum effect to pull the olive oil into the clay which glazes and seals it. Then leave the tagine cool down in the turned off oven.
The last photo shows a cured tagine ready for use. 



TAGINE CLEANING
It is recommended that you hand wash your tagine, as it has not been tested for dishwashers. Do not leave submerged in soapy water.