When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: traditional clothing from puerto rico and costa rica

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Guayabera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guayabera

    Two guayaberas seen from the back, showing the alforza pleats and the Western-style yoke. The guayabera (/ ɡ w aɪ. ə ˈ b ɛr ə /), also known as camisa de Yucatán (Yucatán shirt) in Mexico, is a men's summer shirt, worn outside the trousers, distinguished by two columns of closely sewn pleats running the length of the front and back of the shirt.

  3. Culture of Costa Rica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Costa_Rica

    Moreover, Costa Rica accepted many refugees from various other Latin American countries fleeing civil wars and dictatorships during the 1970s and 1980s – notably from El Salvador, Chile, Argentina, Cuba and recently from Venezuela. Currently immigrants represent 9% of the Costa Rican population, the largest in Central America and the Caribbean.

  4. Culture of Puerto Rico - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Puerto_Rico

    Although the island's culture is not heterogeneous, Puerto Rico establishes several binary oppositions to the United States: American identity versus Puerto Rican identity, English language versus Spanish language, Protestant versus Catholic, and British heritage versus Hispanic heritage. [15]

  5. Culture of Latin America - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Latin_America

    Guatemalan girls in their traditional clothing from the town of Santa Catarina Palopó on Lake Atitlán. The Maya people are known for their brightly colored yarn-based textiles, which are woven into capes, shirts, blouses, huipiles and dresses. Each village has its own distinctive pattern, making it possible to distinguish a person's home town ...

  6. Mundillo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mundillo

    Mundillo de Moca Women in Puerto Rico making Mundillo lace, 1920 Mundillo (bobbin lace) Mundillo bobbin lace roller pillow and bobbins with pricking, from Puerto Rico Monumento a la Tejedora, Moca, Puerto Rico. Mundillo is a craft of handmade bobbin lace that is cultivated and honored on the island of Puerto Rico and Panama. [1]

  7. Jíbaro (Puerto Rico) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jíbaro_(Puerto_Rico)

    As early as 1820, Miguel Cabrera identified many of the jíbaros' ideas and characteristics in his set of poems known as The Jibaro's Verses.Then, some 80 years later, in his 1898 book Cuba and Porto Rico, Robert Thomas Hill listed jíbaros as one of four socio-economic classes he perceived existed in Puerto Rico at the time: "The native people, as a whole, may be divided into four classes ...

  8. Ngäbe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ngäbe

    Attendees of balseria typically dress in traditional Ngäbe clothing and colors. They wear feathers, animal skins, and even entire animals on their backs. Some men also wear the woman's traditional dress, or nagua, to hide their legs during the match. Horns, whistles, and improvised trumpets are widely used.

  9. Pava (Puerto Rico) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pava_(Puerto_Rico)

    Ordinary Puerto Rican Pava. The pava is a straw hat made out of the leaves of the Puerto Rican hat palm.It is normally associated with the Puerto Rican jíbaro and with the Popular Democratic Party (PPD).