Indigenous Peoples

A journey to discover the world’s most colourful fabrics

Why are the fabrics of the south of the world so colourful and showy? Let’s discover together the colours and patterns used by indigenous peoples for realising fabrics.

Clothes, as well as food, tell the story of the place and culture to which they belong. We can consider clothes as a display of deep meanings, which go beyond their concrete function, i.e. covering and adorning the body.

 

colourful fabrics world meanings
The colours and patterns of traditional clothes have a meaning that goes beyond aesthetics © vetements99.com

 

Clothes have always been an important means of communication at a social, historical and cultural level. Depending on the geographical area, historical period and social context fashion changes according to culture. With their colourful and shocking tissues as well as patterns indigenous people clearly express the communicative value lying behind every single garment.

 

Myths and indigenous people of America

Before the Spanish invasion in the Americas, under the ancient Aztec empire that controlled Central America (Mexico, Guatemala and Honduras), a type of cloth that still exists today spread. This is the huipil, a sort of loose-fitting tunic with an opening for the head and the sides sewn, made of cotton or wool, available in different lengths. Over the centuries this garment has often been a source of inspiration for fashion. But it keeps its original meanings just among the indigenous people because the colourful and stylised decorations have an important symbolic role: they tell true legends revealing the origin of the woman wearing the huipil.

 

mayan women cloth huipil
The huipil can even be worn on other clothes © David McNew/getty images

 

The symbols used in the decorations include snakes, which are connected to the goddess of midwifery and that of water and represent a woman’s gift of giving life and protection; double-headed eagles that indicate the duality of good and evil, sky and earth or past and future; and many other representations of myths and beliefs of different tribes.

 

African colourful fabrics

African prints, the wonderful colourful fabrics worn by African women, are known and spread worldwide. It’s not by chance that starting from 1800 western countries (mostly UK and Netherlands), charmed by the sublime beauty of these fabrics, have started outsourcing the production of these exotic clothes exactly to this continent. Thanks to the long tradition of Western Africa (Senegal, Burkina Faso and Congo), local artisans have acquired remarkable skills in decorating fabrics of raw cotton. There are as many as three techniques to realise these tissues that give their names to three different types of African prints: fancy is roller printed; java is decorated with an oxidant product that is applied after dyeing; superwax is tie-dyed twice to create different shades.

 

african fabrics
The traditional costume of African women is called “pagne” that literally means cloth © tyitelle.wordpress.com

 

Decorations have a strong symbolic meaning even in Africa. The pyramid, for example, indicates awareness of a social hierarchy in which powerful people elevate themselves and illuminate the path that everyone should walk; the sheaf of wheat symbolises the difficulties of marriage because one can discover what it contains just by opening it; brooding hens with chicks represent the fundamental role of mothers in a family who bring together the family members as well as protect their offspring.

 

These are some of the original meanings. Today there are new meanings. For example alphabet letters indicate the education of the person who wears the cloth and the other modern elements include lorries, cell phones etc.

 

Weaving, a distinctive feature of India

The importance of fabrics in this country is celebrated with a “charka” (a particular Indian loom) on the national flag. But, besides the particular processing techniques of tissues, India produces traditionally colourful clothes that were originally made with natural dyes derived from spices.

 

natural dyes spices
The use of spices to dye fabrics is coming back in fashion © ingimage.com

 

Two main techniques are used to create decorations: batik, consisting in covering the areas that won’t be dyed with wax, clay, resin or starch, thus preventing dyes from being absorbed; and block print consisting in dyeing tissues with pieces of wood that are used as moulds.

 

Contrary to other indigenous cultures, the true symbology of Indian inhabitants lies in colours themselves. The colours of saris, the traditional draped costume that Indian women pass down from generation to generation since 100 a.C., stand for a precise social condition. Red, the colour worn by brides represents fertility and sensuality; yellow is the colour of spirituality and birth, and is worn by women who have recently given birth; white is the colour of mourning.

 

sari cloth india
White for Buddhist people symbolises rest and thought © Daniel Berehulak/getty images

 

The beauty of the past in the present

There are many places in the world worth visiting at least once in a lifetime. Obviously those with a long tradition are a good starting point. Even just to taste the authenticity that has never ceased to be charming.

 

Featured image © www.asa100.com

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