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Thirty S

Big Changes Came to Fashion Trends in the 1930s | The 1930s - 0 views

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    Matthew Rivera .Here is an article that discusses more on fashion trends in the 1930s.
Egypt A

Egyptian Statues - Gay Robins - Google Books - 0 views

shared by Egypt A on 12 Dec 14 - No Cached
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    Marissa-For over three thousand years, ancient Egyptian sculptors created statues of deities, kings and elite officials and their families. These were set up mainly in temples or tombs and played a vital role in temple and funerary ritual, being places where non-physical entities deities, the royal ka-spirit and the ka-spirits of the dead could manifest themselves in this world. The book begins by examining the materials and techniques employed by sculptors and the various statue types and poses that occur. Next it explores the function of statues and the different contexts for which they were made. This is followed by a chapter explaining the notion of the ideal image: statues were not intended to be exact likenesses but rather ideal images reflecting the identity, role and status of the subject. The individual identity of a statue was usually provided by inscriptions, and the various texts found on statues are discussed together with the different types of relief decoration that occur on statue surfaces. A final chapter considers what was constant and what changed over time and looks at the influence that Egyptian statues had on the origins of monumental Greek sculpture. Dr Gay Robins studied Egyptology at the University of Durham as an undergraduate and then went to Oxford to undertake research on queens of the Eighteenth Dynasty, obtaining a DPhil in 1981. She has published numerous articles relating to ancient Egyptian art, women and gender issues, and the living stature and physical proportions of the ancient Egyptians.
Egypt A

Clothing in ancient Egypt - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • linen was by far the most common textile
  • people to be comfortable in the subtropical heat.[1]
  • Plant dyes could be applied to clothing but the clothing was usually left in its natural color.
  • ...45 more annotations...
  • Spinning, weaving and sewing were very important techniques for all Egyptian societies
  • were used on occasion for overcoats, but were forbidden in temples and sanctuaries.
  • Wool was known, but considered impure.
  • Peasants, workers and other people of modest condition often wore nothing, but the shenti (made of flax) was worn by all people. Slaves often worked naked.
  • The most common headdress was the khat or nemes, a striped cloth worn by men.
  • pharaohs would wear leopard skins over their shoulders and added a lion’s tail that would hang from their belt.
  • men's skirts were short.
  • The men wore wrap around skirts known as the Shendyt, which were belted at the waist, sometimes pleated or gathered in the fron
  • 1420 BC, there was a light tunic or blouse with sleeves, as well as a pleated petticoat.
  • 600 B.C., came, the skirt was worn longer.[
  • Beading or feathers were also used as an embellishment on the dress.
  • more conservative than men's clothing
  • only changed slightly
  • held up by one or two straps and were worn down to the ankle, while the upper edge could be worn above or below the breasts.
  • women had a choice of wearing shawls, capes, or robes. The shawl was a piece of cloth around 4 feet wide by 13 or 14 feet long
  • wore simple sheath dresses called kalasiris
  • Draped clothing
  • It was made of haïk, a very fine muslin.
  • nce they turne
  • worn by wealthy people of society.
  • usually wore no clothing,
  • children was the side-lock on the right side of the head.
  • common to both genders,
  • ewelry such as anklets, bracelets, collars, and hair accessories
  • ornaments incorporated
  • Egyptians became very skilled when making jewelry from turquoise, metals lik
  • woven into certain hairstyles and were quite inexpensive.
  • women sometimes wore cuplets filled with perfume. They were w
  • y were
  • rn to also keep out head lice and protected the head when doing dangerous things.
  • very popular in Ancient Egypt,
  • no matter the social class
  • eal huma
  • with earrings
  • men and women
  • e gold and silver, and small beads.
  • rings,
  • neck collars that were brightly colored
  • necklaces
  • bracelets,
  • from gold or other stones would make their jewelry from colored pottery beads.[9]
  • ho could not afford jewelry
  • One creation
  • specific to ancient Egypt was the gorgerine,
  • metal discs
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    Marissa- Includes description of egyption history of their clothing from young age to to parent hood 
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