Shalwar Kameez Biography
Source:- Google.com.pk
Salwar Kameez is the closest to Islamic dress (Evidently there is no such dress as Islmic, but one which covers the body in the maximum possible way).It is taken from the Sub Continent when Pakistan, India and Bangladesh used represent one country. Shalwar Suit has also the depiction from the Islamic Culture. The words shalwar and kameez are both from the Pahlavi language, a Middle Iranian language that developed from Old Persian, the language of the Zoroastrians of Iran. The use of the shalwar and kameez as a national Iranian costume can be seen from Parthian times and the best known examples are the large bronze statue from Shami in outh-western Iran dated late 1st century BCE and found in the Tehran Museum; and the statue of the worshipper from Hatra in Iraq, depicting a shalwar and a belted kameez.Similarly, the statue from Bard-i-Nishandeh from south-western Iran, 3rd century AD, depicts a royal Parthian personage wearing the shalwar and kameez. In fact, this early Zoroastrian anian dress became so popular that it was later widely adopted by non-Arab countries from Central Asia to the subcontinent. If anything, the shalwar-kameez is a Zoroastrian Iranian national costume, and despite the Arab invasion of Iran in the 7th century the Parthian shalwar-kameez prevailed as a dress code in most of these countries. This can also be seen by its continuous usage for over 2,000 years in the villages of Kurdistan, Azerbaijan, Yazd and Luristan in Iran. Salwar Kameez does pass this test and probably because of which it is the most preferred dress by women.Shalwar kameez is a traditional dress worn by both women and men in South Asia and specially Kazakhstan, Bangladesh , Pakistan and India/South Asia . Shalwar or salwar are loose pajama-like trousers. The legs are wide at the top, and narrow at the ankle. The kameez is a long shirt or tunic. The side seams (known as the chaak), left open below the waist-line, give the wearer greater freedom of movementShalwar are gathered at the waist and held up by a drawstring or an elastic band. The pants can be wide and baggy or more narrow, and even made of fabric cut on the bias.Garments cut like the traditional kameez are known in many cultures; according to Dorothy Burnham, of the Royal Ontario Museum, the "seamless shirt," woven in one piece on warp-weighted looms, was superseded in early Roman times by cloth woven on vertical looms and carefully pieced so as not to waste any cloth. 10th century cotton shirts recovered from the Egyptian desert are cut much like the traditional kameez or the contemporary Egyptian jellabah or galabia. The kameez is usually cut straight and flat; older kameez use traditional cuts, as shown in the illustration above. Modern kameez are more likely to have European-inspired set-in sleeves. The tailor's taste and skill are usually displayed, not in the overall cut, but in the shape of the neckline and the decoration of the kameez. Modern versions of the feminine kameez can be much less modest than traditional versions. The kameez may be cut with a deep neckline, sewn in diaphanous fabrics, or styled in cap-sleeve or sleeveless designs.
Shalwar Kameez
Shalwar Kameez
Shalwar Kameez
Shalwar Kameez
Shalwar Kameez
Shalwar Kameez
Shalwar Kameez
Shalwar Kameez
Shalwar Kameez
Shalwar Kameez
Shalwar Kameez
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