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Wallaahi Someone needs to tell me more about the different somali duubis and how to look for it and its gonna be you nowYou don't have permission to view the spoiler content. Log in or register now.
Hey hey hey, I just like nice pictures, the details are mainly lost on meWallaahi Someone needs to tell me more about the different somali duubis and how to look for it and its gonna be you now
Jzk allhHey hey hey, I just like nice pictures, the details are mainly lost on me
But I can try break down the differences I do notice
There are three main pattern styles
1) Plain Cotton (The classic and most common)
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2) Dyed (Typically a pattern including the shade red, the drippy version)
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3) Trimmed edges (Very rare style)
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There are 3 main wrapping styles
1) The basic wrap, there's not much I can say. All tucked in
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2) Some times a tiny bit hangs out
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3) Sometimes if the cloth is very long, its made to hang on the shoulder
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4) Or just left hanging at the back
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They look mainly like floral patterns, kind of like this (but the colours reversed)You don't have permission to view the spoiler content. Log in or register now.
For common women the fashion switched from Guuntino to kurdad iyo googorad (which eventually became Dirac bacweyn)Those clothings were worn by tribal leaders, people in the cities, and such, but the typical pastoralist wore this:
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Typical Somali woman:View attachment 360857
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Adapting this to the modern day you would obviously want to use drippier clothing, china didn't mould their cultural drip off rice farmersThose clothings were worn by tribal leaders, people in the cities, and such, but the typical pastoralist wore this:
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Typical Somali woman:View attachment 360857
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Those clothings were worn by tribal leaders, people in the cities, and such, but the typical pastoralist wore this:
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View attachment 360858View attachment 360861View attachment 360865
Typical Somali woman:View attachment 360857
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For common women the fashion switched from Guuntino to kurdad iyo googorad (which eventually became Dirac bacweyn)
For common men the go’ huwasho became shaadh iyo macawiis. The cotton white duub was popular since it protected the scalp. This was replaced with the koofiyad
Those clothings were worn by tribal leaders, people in the cities, and such, but the typical pastoralist wore this:
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Typical Somali woman:View attachment 360857
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I'm just doing an anthropological post, not trying to recreate it. But the clothing for men who did pastoralism is probably the most enduring. You found it across the broader "Barbaria."Adapting this to the modern day you would obviously want to use drippier clothing, china didn't mould their cultural drip off rice farmers
But the white cloth is kinda hard Should be adapted into shirt form, somewhat like a blouse but with more flowy shapes and emphasising the built form
I have never worn a macwiis, so not the right guy to ask, love.Someone needs to make a stitched macwiis or one with a belt. I have never worn one but how do they not fall off?
Please read what I wrote as a response to unug3aad.I think there is potential to incorporate this into our traditional clothing but all nations make their traditional costumes based on what the rich wore, not the poor. That is why many cultural revival projects start with what the upper class wore.
Baklava is a good example. At one point, it was only for the wealthy. Today, it is the most well known sweet from Turkey and a staple part of their culinary heritage. We all are drawn to the glamour of the past.
You tie it like a towel its actually really secureSomeone needs to make a stitched macwiis or one with a belt. I have never worn one but how do they not fall off?
The common Somali would wear white wrapped clothing, I think this was a common wardrobe of Northeast Africans from Sudan to Somalia, you see older sketches and images of Ethiopians and Sudanis wearing similar clothes.You don't have permission to view the spoiler content. Log in or register now.