Latest Pakistani Shalwar Kameez Biography
Source (Google.com.pk)As you known that fashion is growing fast today. Many top brand and online shopping store having huge varieties for every occasion. We hope that you like our previous posts on designer dresses. Here is top online shopping brand CBazaar has launched readymade Pakistani salwar kameez suits 2013. Now a days these types fancy dresses common in all over Asia because Hindu and Muslim women can like to wear embroidered casual wear dresses. Here we are going to share with you some stunning Embroidered border frocks, long shirts with embroidery necklines with salwar. Net sleeves are given with all of these shirts. These beautiful Pakistani dresses are perfect wearing option for parties, wedding and engagement occasions. These dresses are perfect for summer season.
It is a long fitted black frock with wide embroidery border, net sleeves with matching border, chiffon net dubattas with salwar. Red and pink color looking awesome with black contrast.
The term Pakistani clothing refers to the ethnic clothing that is typically worn by individuals in the country of Pakistan and by the People of Pakistani descent. Pakistani clothes express the Culture of Pakistan, the Demographics of Pakistan and regional Cultures which include Punjabi culture, Sindhi culture, Balochi culture, Pashtun culture and Kashmiri culture. Dress in each regional culture reflect weather conditions, way of living and distinctive style which gives it a unique identity among all cultures. Pakistani dressing has similarities with Indian dressing because of pre-partition culture which was shared by these nations for thousand years but the religious factor was always there which makes a difference. Traditional Pakistani dressing also shares similarities between the ethnic groups of central Asia and ethnicities of the Iranian plateau such as the Turkic ethnic groups (i.e. Khazakhs, Uzbeks, Turkmens) and Iranic ethnic groups (Tajiks, Khorasani Persians and Pashtoons), that have been separate from the cultures of modern day Pakistan during the Durand agreement between Afghanistan and the British raj. With the passage of time Pakistanis are adapting modern dress and cultural clothing, especially in big countries.The shalwar kameez is the national dress of Pakistan and is worn by men and women in all four provinces Punjab, Sindh, Baluchistan, Khyber Pakhtoonkhwa and FATA in the country and in Azad Kashmir. Each province has its own style of wearing the Shalwar Qameez.Pakistanis wairclothes range from exquisite colors and designs to the type of fabric (silk, chiffon, cotton, etc.).Shalwar 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). Salwar Kameez does pass this test and probably because of which it is the most preferred dress by women. 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.Salwar Kameez is being made with various fabrics like Georgette salwar kameez, chiffon salwar kameez, net salwar kameez, satin salwar kameez, cotton salwar kameez, silk salwar kameez and other fabrics including the latest trend of fusion fabrics which is mix of the above and synthetic fabric. that Mediaeval Latin camisia is a borrowing through Hellenistic Greek kamision from the Central Semitic root “qm?”, represented by Ugaritic qm? (‘garment’) and Arabic qami? (‘shirt’). Both of these are related to the Hebrew verb ??? qm? (‘grip’, ‘enclose with one’s hand’). The differences exist between Men’s and Women’s Salwaar Kameez. 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. Men and women both were used to wear salwar kameez as part of the traditional dress but over the years Salwar Kameez has found its popularity in India and Pakistan and the salwar kameez is still getting worn in the continent.
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