Afghan clothing
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/e2/Afghan_Schoolchildren_in_Kabul.jpg/220px-Afghan_Schoolchildren_in_Kabul.jpg)
Afghan clothing consists of the traditional style of clothing worn in Afghanistan. The various cultural exchanges in the nation's history to the West and East have influenced the styles and flavors of contemporary Afghan designs.[1] The styles can be subdivided into the various ethnicities with unique elements for each. Traditional dresses for both men and women tend to cover the whole body, with trousers gathered at the waist, a loose shirt or dress, and some form of head covering.[2][3]
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History[]
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Men's clothing[]
The perahan tunban is the standard traditional dress for men, consisting of a tunic shirt, pants, and with (optional) head covering.[1] This dress originates from the Pashtun lands but its use spread to most of Afghanistan. It is a form of the shalwar kameez, which is also worn in Pakistan and India. It remains the predominant dress for male villagers. On the head is normally a turban (lungi):[4] they are worn all over the country, but the fabric, color and style varies region by region.[1] For example, an Uzbek hat from the north of the country looks very different than a Pashtun hat worn in the south.[2]
From a young age, boys often wear colorful caps with shiny "chips" of mirrors sewn into them.[1]
The karakul hat is made of sheep fur and is of typical Central Asian style. Normally worn by the more stylish or educated, these hats come in conservative colors.[1] The chapan coat is another cloth of Central Asian origin that provides warmth in the winter, made of striped silk.[1] The chapan gained international recognition in the 2000s when Afghan president Hamid Karzai always wore a green one.[4]
An Afghan soldier wearing perahan tunban, c. 1843
Afghan security personnel in folk costume, c. 1867
Sher Ali Khan and his company in 1869, all wearing Afghan attire
Leader of the Ghilzais, 1848
Men wearing a chapan, 2004
Old men in Herat wearing perahan tunban, 2009
Man in perahan tunban and a taqiyah (Islamic) cap
A man wearing Hazara style turban
Women's clothing[]
Traditional women's dresses are always long[1] and are made from light linens and are loose fitting for ease of movement. They come in many colors and have stitching for details. Most traditional clothing are colorful, except for the Nuristan dress.[1] More elaborate and fancier dresses are detailed with gold threading (Zardozi), gold beads, and come in many different colors on silk fabrics. These dresses are usually worn to special occasions and weddings.
They are usually of heavy design and filled with small mirrors around the chest area, along with long and pleated skirts.[5]
Most Afghans are Muslim and virtually all Afghan women wear a head covering based on the local interpretation of religious laws. Most women wear a hijab or chador as a covering. Some wear a chadari, better known in the West as burqa.[2]
In a few places like Kabul, Western dresses like jeans are often worn. From the 1960s to 1990s, more liberal forms of female dress like miniskirts were popular among some communities in Kabul.[6]
Ladies of the royal harem wearing firaq partug, 19th century
Woman of Kandahar wearing khet partug, 1841
Uzbek girls in Kabul
Two women in Turkmen dress
A female model in traditional Afghan dress
Burqa-clad women
A girl in Hazara dress
A girl in Pashayi dress
Nomadic kuchi woman
A choker necklace from Afghanistan made from silver and lapis
Culture and society[]
Clothes are usually stitched by hand. Girls start learning embroidery from an early age, and skills are normally passed down from mothers to daughters. Each dress created by a woman can be seen as a unique peace of art.[1]
Certain attire have special significance, for example in some Pashtun or Baloch cultures in southern Afghanistan, a boy marks his start of adulthood by being allowed to wear a turban.[2]
Politics[]
The clothing of Afghanistan gained wide attention in the Western world following the U.S. invasion and fall of the Taliban regime, under which ultraconservative dress like the burqa was made compulsory. Especially, Hamid Karzai gained popularity for his creative style blending various attire of Afghanistan.[4] In September 2021, Afghan women launched an online campaign protesting against the Taliban's strict dress code after the militants took power.[5]
Also notably, a photo taken in Kabul in 1972 showing local women in miniskirts was reportedly shown to then-President Donald Trump of the United States by H. R. McMaster, which persuaded Trump to keep American toops in Afghanistan.[7]
Western and hippie appeal[]
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/2b/Afghaanse_jas_van_bruine_su%C3%A8de_met_langharig_bont_langs_de_randen_en_manchetten_en_doorgestikt_borduursel_in_cr%C3%A8me_en_roze%2C_haaksluiting_voorzijde%2C_objectnr_24389%281%29.JPG/220px-thumbnail.jpg)
Sheepskin Afghan coats became popular in the Western world during the late 1960s; John Lennon famously wore one during the launch of his band's Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band album in London. The Afghan coat became a popular dress in the hippie subculture Afghanistan itself was on the hippie trail and such coats were often bought by foreigners in Kabul's Chicken Street.[8]
See also[]
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Traditional dress of Afghanistan. |
- Pashtun clothing
- Khet partug
- Firaq partug
- Afghan Girl
References[]
- ^ a b c d e f g h i "AfghanEthnicDolls.com - Traditional Clothes of Afghanistan".
- ^ a b c d "4. Basic forms of traditional dress".
- ^ "Clothing".
- ^ a b c "Modern or traditional?".
- ^ a b "Afghan women hit back at Taliban with #DoNotTouchMyClothes campaign". BBC News. 13 September 2021.
- ^ "FACT CHECK: Were Women Allowed to Wear Mini Skirts in 1970s Afghanistan?".
- ^ "The Weaponization of Nostalgia: How Afghan Miniskirts Became the Latest Salvo in the War on Terror". 7 September 2017.
- ^ "Friday essay: How 'Afghan' coats left Kabul for the fashion world and became a hippie must-have".
- Afghan clothing
- History of Asian clothing
- Afghan culture
- Pashtun culture