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  2. Traje de flamenca - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traje_de_flamenca

    The traje de flamenca ("flamenco outfit") or traje de gitana [1] ("Gitana outfit") is the dress traditionally worn by women at Ferias (festivals) in Andalusia, Spain. There are two forms: one worn by dancers and the other worn as a day dress. The day dress is body-hugging to mid-thigh, and then continues in multiple layers of ruffles to the ankle.

  3. Category:Spanish clothing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Spanish_clothing

    This category describes traditional and historic Spanish clothing. Modern Spanish clothing should be categorised under Spanish fashion or Clothing companies of Spain.

  4. 1600–1650 in Western fashion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1600–1650_in_Western_fashion

    A Lady from Spanish court wears an elegant, black dress. Its simplicity is a testament to the austerity of the Spanish court; however, her high hair is quite fashionable, as well as the mass of curls on both sides of her face c. 1635. Sara Wolphaerts van Diemen wears a double cartwheel ruff that remained popular in the Netherlands through the ...

  5. Farthingale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Farthingale

    They were replaced by small rolls or bum-rolls that persisted throughout the rest of the seventeenth century. In Spain, the Spanish farthingales evolved into the guardainfante and remained an identifiable part of Spanish dress until the eighteenth century. Anne of Denmark's daughter, Elizabeth Stuart, Queen of Bohemia, was in Prague in 1620 ...

  6. Baro't saya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baro't_saya

    Tagalog maginoo (nobility) wearing baro in the Boxer Codex (c.1590). Baro't saya evolved from two pieces of clothing worn by both men and women in the pre-colonial period of the Philippines: the baro (also barú or bayú in other Philippine languages), a simple collar-less shirt or jacket with close-fitting long sleeves; [5] and the tapis (also called patadyong in the Visayas and Sulu ...

  7. Pollera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pollera

    Polleras are a form of Spanish colonial dress enforced sometime between the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries on indigenous populations in the Andes by hacienda owners or hacendados. Traditional polleras come from peasant dress from southern Spanish regions like Andalusia. Today, polleras are associated with indigenous and folkloric forms of ...