Handmade in Sikkim
Award-winning Handicrafts of Sikkim
Eco-friendly bamboo crafts, organic products, and meaningful souvenirs from Khechuperi Bamboo House.
Handmade in Sikkim
Eco-friendly bamboo crafts, organic products, and meaningful souvenirs from Khechuperi Bamboo House.
The People Behind the Craft
Learn how local skills, natural materials, and patient handwork come together in products of Sikkim made with purpose.
Rooted in Place and Purpose
Explore Khechuperi Lake and the quiet hills of West Sikkim that inspire the spirit of our work.
Culture, Place and Craft
Read about the culture, places, and living traditions that give the handicrafts of Sikkim their meaning.


Located in the serene landscapes of West Sikkim, Khechuperi Bamboo House creates traditional handicrafts of Sikkim using bamboo and wood sourced from the Himalayan region. Designed for travelers, collectors, and conscious buyers, these handcrafted products offer meaningful alternatives to synthetic and non biodegradable souvenirs commonly found in tourist markets. Each piece carries the warmth of Sikkim’s culture, craftsmanship, and respect for nature.

Instead of factory made decor and plastic mementos, our bamboo crafts offer visitors a way to take home a genuine piece of Sikkim’s tradition and artistry.

By choosing bamboo and wood over synthetic materials, these handicrafts support local artisans while reducing reliance on products that harm the environment.
Our Craft
We craft indigenous handicrafts of Sikkim. Our focus is on engineering eco-conscious products for the kitchen, the home, and the stories people carry back with them. You will feel the uniqueness. And sense the fragrance of love flowing down from nature-loving ancestors in our products.
Handcrafted bamboo and wooden kitchen essentials, such as Theki and Madani, and wooden utensils designed for daily use, combining traditional Sikkimese craftsmanship with practical living needs.
Traditional Kitchen Items
Authentic handicrafts from Sikkim, created for travellers and visitors seeking meaningful keepsakes rather than factory-made non-biodegradable items. For example: keychains, bamboo diaries, momentous.
Decorative & Souvenir Pieces
Naturally crafted decor and gift items made from bamboo and wood, suited for homes, gifting, and cultural displays. For example, Bamboo water bottles, hanging lights, bathroom items
Explore Our HandicraftsShri Indra Kari Subba is the heart behind Khechuperi Bamboo House, a bamboo artisan from West Sikkim whose work brings together tradition, usefulness, and quiet pride in where he comes from.
A Master's graduate and member of Oviya Art Circle Sikkim, he has spent years shaping bamboo and wood into pieces that do more than look beautiful. They are made to be used, gifted, remembered, and lived with.
Through formal training, workshops, exhibitions, and years of hands-on practice, he has helped turn local craftsmanship into a thoughtful range of eco-friendly products and authentic handicrafts rooted in Sikkim.
His work has also received wider recognition, including at the G20 Summit Sikkim 2023, but the spirit behind it remains simple: keep the craft honest, keep it useful, and carry it forward with respect.
Since founding the house in 2016, he has turned inherited Himalayan skills into everyday treasures that feel both timeless and kind to the earth. His journey continues as he dreams up a better way forward for his community in West Sikkim.

BAMBOO CRAFT

Basket

KNOWLEDGE SHARING

WOMEN ARTISANS

TRAINING & GROWTH

Each creation supports rural livelihoods while offering visitors and conscious buyers an authentic piece of Sikkim to take home.
Crafted using naturally grown bamboo sourced from Sikkim, our products are free from plastic, chemicals, and synthetic finishes. Each piece reflects the raw beauty of bamboo, shaped by skilled local hands using traditional methods passed down through generations.

Sikkim stands as India's Himalayan crown jewel, compact yet commanding, peaceful yet powerful. This northeastern state, though India's smallest by area,
Continue Reading