Jirawat “Maan” Sriluansoi

Jirawat “Maan” Sriluansoi

CO-FOUNDER, THE ONLY MARKET BANGKOK

Industry : Business

  • Social :

Rooted in memory, material, and meaning, Jirawat “Maan” Sriluansoi co-founded The Only Market Bangkok in 2017 with the goal of redefining the idea of souvenirs. With over 17 years experience in styling and graphic design, Maan combines his deep appreciation for local culture and visual storytelling to create objects that honour history, identity, and imperfection. The Only Market embraces recycled materials and hand-crafted processes, turning forgotten or overlooked items into thoughtful lifestyle pieces.

Maan’s creative direction brings together elements of art, fashion, and culture to give everyday items new meaning. Drawing on personal memories –like riding Bangkok buses or visiting old Chinese pharmacies–he incorporates familiar experiences into the identity of the brand, hoping to connect with others through shared emotion and nostalgia. The result is an aesthetic that feels both rooted and open, with a sense of nostalgia and playfulness that reflects his perspective. Through The Only Market, Maan collaborates with local artisans and offers a fresh lens on Thai identity one that resists cliché and embraces contradiction. Each piece, from upcycled deadstock garments to reinterpreted city icons, is a celebration of both the ordinary and the extraordinary, encouraging people to cherish the overlooked and the everyday.

Jirawat “Maan” Sriluansoi

Friday Future Lister: Unpacking the Creative World of Jirawat “Maan” Sriluansoi and The Only Market Bangkok

A modern interpretation of Thainess built from everyday objects and personal cultural experience through The Only Market Bangkok. 

Conversation with Jirawat “Maan” Sriluansoi reveals a creative. With more than 17 years of experience spanning styling, graphic design and visual storytelling, Maan has worked across multiple creative disciplines, with each chapter informing the way he understands objects, culture and meaning. 

Courtesy of Koktail Thailand

He describes himself as someone who loves graphic design, calligraphy, sustainable thinking, souvenirs, fashion and even technology. While these interests may seem like separate threads, they come together in The Only Market Bangkok, a brand that reimagines what souvenirs and “Thainess” can mean today. Through this journey, we trace his evolving vision and the path that has led him to where he stands now.

Courtesy of Koktail Thailand

Maan’s Path to The Only Market Bangkok 

First: Experience as a Foundation

Maan’s path into fashion was shaped by a wide range of hands-on experiences. He began as a graphic designer at a magazine working across photoshoots, art direction and visual storytelling, while also working as a stylist. These roles naturally connected him with a close circle of creatives he respected. During this time he led Thai fashion brands such as Sretsis, Dry Clean Only, PONYSTONE, among many others, to buyers resulting in their launch in showrooms in Japan and elsewhere. 

In 2017 Maan got the opportunity to work with a showroom in Paris. He was then approached by Patipat “Best” Chaipukdee, founder of Dry Clean Only, who wanted to create a collection to be presented and sold through this showroom. Best asked Maan for his assistance; for Maan the timing was right and Dry Clean Only launched in Paris with his help. 

Second: Discovering Power Through Calligraphy

He went on to study how to design calligraphy with Jinda Nerngchamnong, an expert in Thai handwriting and calligraphy. He began with the Thai script for Krung Thep Maha Nakhon printed on T-shirts in collaboration with Dry Clean Only. That was the moment Maan realised something fundamental: the Thai language worked too. As a graphic designer, he naturally saw everything as elements, and the Bangkok name itself became one. 

Courtesy of Koktail Thailand

That shift in perspective became the starting point. After returning from France, Maan was approached by Barom “Tay” Bhicharnchitr, the visionary behind Central Embassy and founder of Thai multi-store SIWILAI, with an invitation to create products for the store. He began simply: T-shirts, tote bags, caps, lighters, and even picture frames, all featuring the Krung Thep Maha Nakhon typography. 

From there The Only Market Bangkok continued to grow, expanding with new branches across leading department stores including Emporium, Emsphere, One Bangkok and Siam Discovery. 

Third: Thainess, Interpreted Differently

For Maan Thainess is not expressed through the clichés often associated with Thailand, such as elephants, temples or Buddha imagery. Instead his products reflect a quieter, more personal understanding of Thai identity.

His creative direction blends art, fashion and culture to give everyday objects new meaning. Drawing from personal memories and lived experiences, he weaves familiar moments into the brand’s identity, creating a sense of connection through shared emotion and nostalgia. 

For example, he incorporates the iconic duck paddle boats into his designs, alongside the words “Lumpini Park”, referencing the way many people visit the park to ride them and enjoy simple moments of fun.

In another design Ganesha appears as a recurring motif, reflecting both the team’s personal fondness for collecting Ganesha figures wherever they travel, and the wider Thai belief in Ganesha as a symbol of wisdom and good fortune.

Fourth: Purpose Over Production

Sustainability became part of The Only Market Bangkok because Maan had witnessed waste being created and discarded too easily, and he was determined not to add to it. 

Instead of mass-producing new products, he prefers to work with things that already exist in the world. For example he uses ready-made T-shirts from manufacturers, as well as ceramic producers whose items are already in circulation. His aim is not necessarily to solve recycling outright but to reduce the need to construct or produce something new in the first place. 

His approach is simple: whenever possible, do not create from scratch. Instead use what already exists, give it new meaning and allow it to tell a story. For him sustainability is not only about recycling but about consuming less, building less and extending the life of objects by giving them value. 

Fifth: Using Technology to Reduce Waste

Nowadays Maan’s curiosity about AI and technology has become an integral part of both his practice and his teaching. Alongside his creative work, he is also a lecturer at Rangsit University where he teaches students how to understand and work with AI, not as a shortcut but as a tool for thinking, questionin, and creating more responsibly.

Seeking a way to create impact with less consumption, Maan immersed himself in AI studies. Today AI has become part of his creative process. He uses it to generate photoshooting or others that might otherwise require large-scale production.

Altogether: Maan’s Monument

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