Here we are, at the tail end of August, a month that seems to have slipped past in a blur of heat, rhythm and neon light. Before September arrives, it feels worth pausing to see what the city has offered this last weekend. For those drawn to secondhand treasures, Chang Chui Flea Market remains a small universe of possibility. Stalls brim with vintage fashion, handmade curios and objects that carry stories, while street food smells coil through the air and music threads through conversations. It is a place where trading becomes theatre, and every purchase feels like a tiny triumph.
Meanwhile, Nippon Haku Bangkok turns a central hall into a bridge to Japan, with films, talks and screenings that recall the flickering glow of old cinemas. Tsui Hark, Philip Yung and Anthony Pun share space with tender, unsparing stories of modern life, leaving viewers oscillating between nostalgia and revelation. For sound seekers, the city hides secret gatherings like the Transport party. DJs bend house, techno and left-field grooves into a labyrinth of rhythm, where the day folds into night and the unexpected becomes inevitable.
And then there is the softer, soulful Sunday at Sheraton Grande Sukhumvit. Jazzy Brunch transforms Rossini’s and The Living Room into a stage for Chef Stefano Merlo’s nostalgic Italian creations, paired with live jazz that bends the light across the room. Lobster linguine, burrata bruschetta and lasagna resonate like notes in a long, lingering melody – an edible echo of the month itself.
August may be ending, but these fragments of music, food and discovery linger, like the echo of a song.