How I Roll In Myanmar (Trishaw) | Tablet/Laptop Sleeve
Protect and carry your tablet or laptop with style and quality while showcasing bold and charismatic designs of Myanmar’s intriguing culture and heritage,
This high-quality sleeve is available in three sizes to protect your tablet or laptop from scratches and minor impacts this sleeve surely will become an elegant and stylish companion from day to day.
Type: Smooth Neoprene Front and Black Polyester Back
Printing Method: Dye Sublimation
Exclusively designed for you by talented Myanmar designers and creative minds.
Protect and carry your tablet or laptop with style and quality while showcasing bold and charismatic designs of Myanmar’s intriguing culture and heritage,
This high-quality sleeve is available in three sizes to protect your tablet or laptop from scratches and minor impacts this sleeve surely will become an elegant and stylish companion from day to day.
Type: Smooth Neoprene Front and Black Polyester Back
Printing Method: Dye Sublimation
Exclusively designed for you by talented Myanmar designers and creative minds.
Protect and carry your tablet or laptop with style and quality while showcasing bold and charismatic designs of Myanmar’s intriguing culture and heritage,
This high-quality sleeve is available in three sizes to protect your tablet or laptop from scratches and minor impacts this sleeve surely will become an elegant and stylish companion from day to day.
Type: Smooth Neoprene Front and Black Polyester Back
Printing Method: Dye Sublimation
Exclusively designed for you by talented Myanmar designers and creative minds.
Product Features
Durable, lightweight, and water-resistant
Features dual zipper enclosures
Foam padding which absorbs minor bumps and shocks
Every product went through a 3-step quality check system
Size Guide (Height x Length)
10” : 11.25” (28.58 cm) x 8.75” (22.23 cm)
13” : 13.50” (34.29 cm) x 10.50” (26.67 cm)
15” : 14.50” (36.83 cm) x 11.25” (28.58 cm)
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Delivery
Standard (United States) | 5-7 Business Days
Standard (Canada) | 7-10 Business Days
Standard (Rest of the World) | 10-14 Business Days
Direct Shipment from Myanmar | 10-20 Business Days
To ensure quality and customer satisfaction, we use various Suppliers and Fulfilment Partners for our products and orders. As such, delivery times provided here are estimated and might differ based on the number of products in the order to be processed and fulfilled.
You will see the available shipping method and delivery costs in the order checkout.
Order Production
Items are made to order and typically ship within 2-3 business days.
Items sourced directly from Myanmar typically ship within 5-7 business days.
Returns
Return requests can be made within 30 days of your item(s) delivery. Terms & Conditions Apply.
For more information please visit Delivery & Returns.
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Before cleaning the bag, remove all the items from the bag.
Suggested to pretreat visible stains with stain remover.
Use warm water, dish soap, and clean spots off your sleeve. For hard to clean spots use a soft bristled brush.
It's not necessary to soak the whole sleeve.
Let the bag air dry.
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Myanmar Trishaw (ဆိုက်ကား)
In Myanmar, cycle rickshaws or trishaws (known as ဆိုက်ကား /saik kar), directly pronounced as in the English word “side car”) came first into wide use in 1938, when the Year-1300 Revolution (Myanmar Traditional Calendar), which originated from the Chauk oil-field strike, inspired the people in Mandalay to have a consciousness of nationalism and to boycott British goods and services.
The auto body technician Saya Nyo built the first trishaw in Mandalay by attaching a side-car to the side of an old bicycle. So two passengers are on the right of the driver.
Only two forms of transportation were then available in the city; the cab and the electric train. The latter could run only on six-mile tracks.
Trishaws could reach every nook and cranny, so the spirit of nationalism plus the advantage of trishaws reaching everywhere made them so popular among Mandalayans that even the train company had to stop its business.
Trishaws are still widely used as means of transportation in Myanmar.