10 Best Gelato Spots to Welcome the Summer Heat
Explore the 10 best gelato spots in Bangkok and nearby cities, where ...
Thailand’s culture has been gaining attention this year, from traditional Thai dress or sabai styled with modern jeans to the latest trend, the country’s sacred flower, the lotus. Scroll online and it keeps appearing, from Pak Khlong Market to snapshots at Memorial Bridge. The pink and green combination feels oddly calming, but there is more to it than just looks.
Known as the Queen of Aquatic Plants, the lotus has long been part of Thai culture. In traditional cuisine, it appears in dishes like miang khum, adding both flavour and visual appeal. In Buddhism, it carries deep meaning, used in temple offerings, meditation and ceremonies as a symbol of purity, enlightenment and the journey of the soul. More widely, it represents rebirth and growth, a reminder of rising even from murky waters. Yet it has never really been a major tourist draw.
Once tucked into the quiet corners of Thai life, the lotus is now having its moment. This year’s rise shows how something ancient can still capture attention in a modern world.
The first moment sparking the lotus craze has to be the Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT) campaign with Lisa at Red Lotus Sea in Bueng Nong Han, Udon Thani as the Amazing Thailand Ambassador. After that, visits to Red Lotus Sea show a significant increase, a transformation into a major tourist attraction. Seeing the pink lotus spread across the lake gives that iconic, global floral moment, just like the hype around Japan’s sakura season or the Netherlands’ tulip fields, but floating on water. It’s serene, tranquil and totally Instagram-worthy.
The numbers speak for themselves. Between 1 December 2025 and 25 January 2026, over 50,000 visitors arrived, almost evenly split between Thai and international tourists from China, Laos, Germany, Japan and more. Usually dominated by Thai visitors, this season saw foreign interest skyrocket, proving the lotus trend is now going viral globally.
Lisa’s presence helped bring international attention and the flower itself also drove the trend, turning Thailand’s national flower into a cultural phenomenon that combined visual appeal, tradition, and social media reach.
Then when Jonathan Anderson showcased his Dior Women Autumn/Winter 2026 at Jardins des Tuileries (my favourite moment ever) the highlight lay not just in the clothes but in the stage itself. Artificial lotuses floated across the famous octagonal pond, creating a scene made for reflection, pause and admiration to the collection.
It quickly became a moment across social media feeds. Unexpected, striking and hard to scroll past.

Courtesy of Dior
Over recent months, Anderson became one of the internet’s favourite designers that revived Dior for the modern world while paying tribute to John Galliano, and this latest collection delivered on that promise. Flowers reimagined throughout the collection, natural shapes transformed into playful designs. Floral silhouettes filled the runway, colours and textures echoing gardens in full bloom. A breath of spring in every look.
But the flower that truly caught attention was the lotus, especially in the form of the heels. The lotus heels became a statement, a cultural echo bridging fashion and nature. Anderson did not specify a type of lotus, yet the symbolism was clear, the tranquil beauty of nature reflected in the audience’s eyes. Revered for centuries and celebrated as Thailand’s national flower, the lotus now finds itself in haute couture, an understated celebration of tradition in the global spotlight.
From these moments, the result is clear: Thai brands, lotus reinterpreted in their own way, and we are loving it. Clothing, shoes and jewellery, nothing off limits. Not just in products, the lotus is now a key visual in content, part of brand storytelling and marketing strategies across platforms. Workshops across Bangkok are joining in, from flower arranging to lotus inspired embossing with foil. Designs are being folded into everyday objects. That pink and green palette is becoming its own aesthetic, soft but eye-catching.
So now let’s talk about the latest trend in Bangkok. You look at it and something about it feels calm. Maybe it is the colour, maybe it is the meaning behind it. Either way, it works. The real lotus craze lives on social media, where people head to flower markets, pick up a bunch of lotus flowers, then snap photos at Memorial Bridge, old town houses, cafés or temples. The contrast hits every time, bright pink and green against aged streets and textures, a new focal point in the city.
It’s the mix that makes it work, modern style against traditional backdrops, edgy fashion paired with something once seen as ordinary. The same energy as the sabai with jeans in a tuk tuk trend, old meets new, cool meets what once felt uncool.
Another reason the trend speaks so loudly is fashion itself, Dior on the runway. Mother Nature at centre stage, floral shapes and patterns reimagined in playful, unexpected ways, not plaid or gingham. This shows why people are so into this trend, embracing the beauty and energy of Mother Nature.
So what’s the good in this? Thailand finds itself in the spotlight in a new way. This trend puts local culture on a global stage, drawing attention to places, traditions and visuals that once felt everyday. Take Red Lotus Sea as an example of how tourism has boosted and now takes a more practical and everyday approach. Tourism picks up, local vendors gain more visibility, and Thai identity reaches wider audiences through social media. The lotus becomes more than a flower, a symbol of the country’s rise in soft power, where culture, creativity and visual storytelling shape how Thailand shows up to the world.
At the same time, there is another side. After the photos are taken, lotus flowers are sometimes left behind on the streets, unused. The trend brings attention and opportunity, but it also calls for awareness. Perhaps the lotus itself says it best. Take it slowly. Appreciate it properly. Keep the beauty not just in photos, but in the city as well.
Now it’s your turn, grab your lotus and head out.
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