Digital Exhibitions

A Well Dressed Foot

A fossil of a (naked) human foot print that is believed to be about one million years old (Kenya, photograph by courtesy of Matthew Bennett, Bournemouth University, England.)

A fossil of a (naked) human foot print that is believed to be about one million years old (Kenya, photograph by courtesy of Matthew Bennett, Bournemouth University, England.)

 In the beginning there was a foot, and it was naked ............

The foot is an essential, albeit often overlooked, area of the human body - until that blister or bunion comes. Yet millions of euros are spent every year on clothing and decorating the feet. The use of footwear; a term that includes items generally worn on the feet and lower legs, goes back thousands of years and it comes in many different forms. But how often do we actually stop and seriously think about our feet and how we dress them?

The materials and final appearance of traditional footwear are related to climate, geography, cultural influences, religion, social status, whether they are worn indoors or outdoors (or indeed both), the type of occupation (a nurse wears different footwear from a metal worker), sport or recreation (compare for example, the shoes worn while playing golf and the boots worn to play football), as well as age and gender. Sometimes the choice of footwear is based only on its ornamental value.

Read more: A Well Dressed Foot

   

Chadaris and burqas

Women in Pul-i Khumri, North Afghanistan, wearing the chadari (2006; photograph by Willem Vogelsang)

Women in Pul-i Khumri, North Afghanistan, wearing the chadari (2006; photograph by Willem Vogelsang)

A digital exhibition about a global icon


There are few garments that have become global icons and are recognized throughout the world. The Scottish kilt is one such icon, another is the Japanese kimono. Recently, the Afghan chadari, with its distinctive, all enveloping blue cape and face veil, has become such an icon.

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The Coptic Qalansuwa or Monastic Hood

St. Antony, the 'first' Coptic monk. He is depicted in this icon wearing a full monastic habit including the qalansuwa

St. Antony, the 'first' Coptic monk. He is depicted in this icon wearing a full monastic habit including the qalansuwa

Read more: The Coptic Qalansuwa or Monastic Hood

   

The Jumlo

An Indus Kohistan jumlo (TRC 1998.032)

An Indus Kohistan jumlo (TRC 1998.032)

A digital exhibition about a very unusual dress
A jumlo is an elaborately decorated, knee length dress from Kohistan in the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) of Pakistan. Kohistan means mountainous land (koh, mountains, -stan, land). This difficult and remote region has a complex cultural history that reflects centuries of trade, migrations and intermingling of various groups from Afghanistan, Central Asia, Pakistan and northern India.

Read more: The Jumlo