Bath Bomb Making Workshop Joins Family Craft Lineup at Ramadan Bazaar
A bath bomb making workshop will be part of the Ramadan Bazaar at Heenat Salma, offering families hands-on small-batch craft experience during the outdoor farm event.

A Bath Bomb Making workshop joins the family craft lineup at Ramadan Bazaar 2026 at Heenat Salma, giving parents and children a hands-on chance to learn small-batch product making in a relaxed outdoor farm setting. The session is one of several paid, hands-on activities organised alongside free attractions aimed at family participation and maker skills.
Ramadan Bazaar runs from 28 January to 1 February 2026, with the site open 3:00 PM to 10:00 PM each day. Entry to Heenat Salma is free and no registration is required to enter the bazaar; a mix of paid and free workshops will be available on-site for visitors to join. Bath Bomb Making is listed explicitly among the paid workshops, alongside lantern-making, candle-making, embroidery, wooden crafts, pottery and more.
Positioned as a family-focused activity, the bath bomb session highlights both traditional and contemporary maker techniques. Parents can expect a supervised, hands-on environment suitable for introducing children to basic measurements, moulding and scenting, skills useful for hobbyists who want to experiment with DIY gifts, sensory play and small-batch home products. The inclusion of bath bombs complements other craft offerings at the bazaar by pairing quick, visible results with the tactile satisfaction that many families seek at community events.
Heenat Salma’s open-air, farm-like setting shapes the practical experience: workshops are scheduled in an outdoor market atmosphere where attendees move between craft stations and free attractions. The broader workshop roster provides cross-over opportunities for families looking to sample multiple crafts during an afternoon or evening visit, and for participants interested in building a small home-based product range. Because the Bath Bomb Making workshop is a paid activity available on-site, plan to sign up or pay at the venue when you arrive.
For community makers, parents and gift-givers, the Ramadan Bazaar’s mix of paid workshops and free attractions creates a compact learning environment that is both social and instructional. Expect the bazaar to be a place to pick up new techniques, try short-form classes and return home with finished items and ideas to develop further. Check the on-site schedule when you arrive and set aside an hour or two if you want to take a workshop; the bath bomb session offers a low-barrier way to add a fizzy, fragrant project to your seasonal craft repertoire.
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