Ottoman clothing

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

An Ottoman official

Ottoman clothing or Ottoman fashion is the style and design of clothing worn during the Ottoman Empire.

Ottoman period

Ottoman Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent adorned in a richly embroidered kaftan
yelek
(jacket or vest) marks her as wealthy and high-ranking.
Abdülmecid I

While those of the palace and court dressed lavishly, common people were only concerned with covering themselves. Starting in the reign of

Jewish
communities, clergy, tradesmen, and state and military officials, particularly strictly enforced during the reign of Suleiman the Magnificent.

In this period men wore outer clothing like the 'mintan' (a vest or short jacket), 'zıbın', '

yelek
' (vest).

Women's everyday wear was şalvar (trousers), a gömlek(chemise) that came down to mid-calf or ankle, a short, fitted jacket called a zıbın, and a sash or belt tied at or just below the waist. For formal occasions, such as visiting friends, the woman added an entari or kaftan, a long robe that was cut like the zıbın apart from the length. Both zıbın and kaftan were buttoned to the waist, leaving the skirts open in front. Both garments also had buttons all the way to the throat but were often buttoned only to the underside of the bust, leaving the garments to gape open over the bust. All of these clothes could be brightly colored and patterned. However, when a woman left the house, she covered her clothes with a ferace, a dark, modestly cut robe that buttoned all the way to the throat. She also covered her hair and face with a pair of veils.

Headgear was the most potent indicator of male social status. While commoners wore "külahs" covered with 'abani' or 'Yemeni', higher-ranking men wore a wide variety of turbans.

'Political crises of the 17th century were reflected in chaos in clothes. The excessively luxurious compulsion for consumption and showing off in the

fez', people employed at the Sublime Porte
began to wear trousers, 'setre' and 'potin'.

Headwear

Ottoman headdresses indicated the status and occupation of the wearer. Royal turbans could be decorated with feathers in an ornamental aigrette. Starting from the 19th century, sultans started wearing fezzes instead of turbans. The daughters of sultans would receive luxurious jewelry when marrying, including diadems or veils with jewels embedded in them. Imperial and noble ladies would also cover their heads with small handkerchiefs and their faces with Brussels net veils.[1]

There are not many records of women's clothing at the time, but artwork can provide some understanding. Headdresses were typically tall, pointed hats with a veil attached to them, which served to cover their faces during outings. In depictions of sultanas, their clothing is mostly fabricated with few references to what Ottoman women actually wore. A portrait of

Roxelana depicts her wearing a pillbox-shaped headdress with decorative jewels on the border. While her headdress illustrates popular styles in Ottoman women's headwear at the time, her clothing remains very similar to European-style clothing. This was a popular way to depict women, specifically sultanas.[2]

Many factors contributed to changes in Ottoman women's garments, including the cost of materials and firmans, or royal declarations. At the beginning of the 18th century, upper-class women began wearing yashmaks, or veils that covered their faces when going out. Over time, the yashmaks became more transparent and wider, with silver embroidery. As more changes were made to women's clothing, yashmaks and feraces were seen less as garments to cover the body, and mor as decorative and ornamental styles.

In the 19th century, there were more extreme changes in women's clothing. Yemenis, or headscarves, were so thin that their hair was almost all visible. Other traditional garments combined Turkish and European fashions.

Around World War I, Turkish women began wearing headscarves tied below the chin instead of the

carsaf, a robe-like dress that covered the whole body and head except for the eyes.[3]

Tanzimat period

During the 'Tanzimat' and 'Meşrutiyet' period in the 19th century, common people still wearing traditional clothing presented a great contrast with to administrators and the wealthy wearing 'redingot', jacket, waistcoat, boyunbağı (tie), 'mintan', sharp-pointed and high-heeled shoes. Women's clothes of the Ottoman period in the 'mansions' and Palace courts included 'Entari', 'kuşak', 'şalvar', 'başörtü', and the 'ferace' of the 19th century without much change.

In the 16th century, women wore two-layer long 'entari' and 'tül', velvet shawls, on their heads. Their outdoor clothing consisted of 'ferace' and 'yeldirme'. The simplification in the 17th century was apparent in an inner 'entari' worn under a short-sleeved, caftan-shaped outfit and a matching belt.

Women's wear becoming more showy and extravagant accompanied adorned hair buns and tailoring. Tailoring in its real sense began in this period. The sense of women's wear primarily began in large residential centers such as Istanbul and İzmir in the 19th century and women gradually began to participate in social life, along with the Westernization movement. Pera became the center of fashion and Paris fashions were followed by tailors of Greek and Armenian origin. In the period of Abdul Hamid II, the 'ferace' (a concealing outer robe shaped like a modestly cut version of the indoor dress) was replaced by 'çarşaf' of different styles. However, the rural sector continued to wear traditional clothing.

Ottoman influence on Western female dress

Charles André van Loo
Man In Oriental Costume ("The Noble Slav"), oil on canvas, by Rembrandt, 1632. A significant example of European emulation of Ottoman dress for the purpose of portraying a dignified, elite appearance.

Interactions between Ottomans and Britons occurred throughout history, but in the 18th century, European visitors and residents in the Ottoman Empire markedly increased, and exploded in the 19th century.

Mary Wortley Montagu (1689–1762), wife of the British ambassador to Constantinople, noted in her Turkish Embassy Letters that Ottoman women "possessed legal property rights and protections that far surpassed the rights of Western women".[7] These female travelers often gained an intimate view of Ottoman culture, since as women, they had easier access to the Muslim elite harems than did men.[8] Şalvar successfully spread into Europe at the end of the 19th century as various female suffragists and feminists used şalvar as a symbol of emancipation. Other British women of distinction, such as Lady Janey Archibald Campbell (1845–1923), and Lady Ottoline (Violet Anne) Morrell (1873–1938) wore şalvar "in an attempt to symbolize their refusal of traditional British standards and sexual differences".[9] Şalvar also spread beyond Europe when Amelia Jenks Bloomer modified these "Turkish trousers" to create American "bloomers".[10]

Another area where the Ottomans influenced female Western dress was in layering. Initially, layering had a practical use for the ancestors of the Ottoman Empire, who were pastoral nomads and horse riders, and needed to wear layers to adapt to changing temperatures.[11] As the Ottoman Empire came into being, the layering of garments would distinguish one's gender, class, or rank within particular communities, while also displaying many sumptuous fabrics, thus signaling one's wealth and status. Layering also had spiritual significance. In Islamic art, layering different patterns represents a spiritual metaphor of the divine order that seems to be incomprehensible, but is actually planned and meaningful.[11]

In Europe, in the 16th century, skirts began to have a layered appearance. Previous to the 16th century, skirts were slit only at the bottom, but now, the slit bisected the front of the skirt to reveal a contrasting layer underneath. Often, the underlayer would coordinate with a layered sleeve.[12] Hanging sleeves were also a European concept derived from the Ottomans, although they arrived in Europe much earlier than layered skirts. In the 12th century, religious and scholarly peoples would wear coats that had hanging sleeves, similar to Turkish-style outer kaftans. These hanging sleeves meant one could see the second layer of fabric underneath the outer layer.[12] Although hanging sleeves had been present in Europe since the 12th century, they did not escape Lady Mary Montague's fascination in the 18th century. In a letter dated 10 March 1717, she wrote to the Countess of Marabout Hafiz (Hafsa) Sultan, a woman who was a favorite of the deposed Sultan Mustafa: "But her dress was something so surprisingly rich, that I cannot forbear describing it to you. She wore a vest called donalmá, which differs from a caftan by long sleeves and folding over the bottom. It was of purple cloth, straight to her shape, and thick-set on each side, down to her feet, and round the sleeves, with pearls of the best water, of the same size as their buttons commonly are."[13]

Republican period

The common clothing styles prevailing in the mid 19th century imposed by religious reasons entered a transformation phase in the Republican period. In this period the 'şapka' and the following 'kılık kıyafet' reform being realized with the leadership of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk in Kastamonu in 1925 had a full impact in Istanbul. Women's 'çarşaf' and 'peçe' were replaced by a coat, scarf, and shawl. Men began to wear hats, jackets, shirts, waistcoats, ties, trousers and shoes. With the industrialization process of the 1960s, women entered the work-life and tailors were substituted by readymade clothes industry. The contemporary fashion concept, as it is in the whole world, is apparent in both social and economic dimensions in Turkey as well.

Modern use

Modern Turkish designers such as Rıfat Özbek, Cemil İpekçi, Vural Gökçaylı, Yıldırım Mayruk, Sadık Kızılağaç, Hakan Elyaban, and Bahar Korçan draw inspiration from historical Ottoman designs, and Ottoman or Ottoman-inspired patterns are important to the Turkish textile industry.

Gallery

Religious garb (1878)

  • Jewish rabbi
    Jewish rabbi
  • Armenian Orthodox patriarch
    Armenian Orthodox
    patriarch
  • Greek Orthodox priest
    Greek Orthodox
    priest
  • Turkish Muslim alim
    Turkish Muslim
    alim
  • Mendicant dervish
  • Active dervish
    Active dervish

Everyday people (1878)

  • Turkish peasant
    Turkish peasant
  • Turkish Zeybek
    Turkish
    Zeybek
  • Turkish man
    Turkish man
  • Turkish woman at home
    Turkish woman at home
  • Veiled Turkish woman
    Veiled Turkish woman
  • Porter
    Porter
  • Turkish Boy
    Turkish Boy
  • Turkish boy
    Turkish boy
  • Turkish girl
    Turkish girl
  • Gypsy girl
    Gypsy
    girl
  • Men aboard a ferry
    Men aboard a ferry
  • Men aboard a ferry
    Men aboard a ferry
  • Odalisque
  • Woman outdoors
    Woman outdoors

Folk costumes in 1873

  • Vilayet of Constantinople
  • 1. Burgher from Constantinople 2. Aiwas (servant)
    1. Burgher from Constantinople
    2. Aiwas (servant)
  • 1. Caikji (boatman) 2. Sakka (water carrier) 3. Hammal (porter)
    1. Caikji (boatman)
    2. Sakka (water carrier)
    3. Hammal (porter)
  • 1. Mevlevi Dervish 2. Bektashi Dervish 3. Mullah
  • 1 and 2. Turkish ladies from Constantinople 3. Turkish schoolboy
    1 and 2. Turkish ladies from Constantinople
    3. Turkish schoolboy
  • 1. Armenian bride 2. Jewish woman from Constantinople 3. Greek girl
    1. Armenian bride
    2. Jewish woman from Constantinople
    3. Greek girl
  • Vilayet of Adrianople
  • 1. Muslim inhabitant of Edirne 2. Muslim horseman from Edirne 3. Christian artisan from Edirne
    1. Muslim inhabitant of Edirne
    2. Muslim horseman from Edirne
    3. Christian artisan from Edirne
  • 1. Macedonian peasant from Monastir 2. Macedonian peasant woman Monastir 3. Bulgarian woman from Shkodër
    1. Macedonian peasant from Monastir
    2. Macedonian peasant woman Monastir
    3. Bulgarian woman from Shkodër
  • 1. Muslim horseman from Plovdiv 2. Bulgarian man from Koyountepe 3. Bulgarian man from Ah'i Tchelebi
    1. Muslim horseman from Plovdiv
    2. Bulgarian man from Koyountepe
    3. Bulgarian man from Ah'i Tchelebi
  • 1. Bulgarian woman from Ahi Tchelebi 2. Greek woman from Haskovo 3. Peasant woman from Baidjas
    1. Bulgarian woman from Ahi Tchelebi
    2. Greek woman from Haskovo
    3. Peasant woman from Baidjas
  • Vilayet of the Danube
  • 1: Bulgarian man from Sofia 2. Bulgarian woman from Sofia
    1: Bulgarian man from Sofia
    2. Bulgarian woman from Sofia
  • 1: Bulgarian woman from Ruse 2. Christian Bulgarian from Vidin 3. Muslim Bulgarian from Vidin
    1: Bulgarian woman from Ruse
    2. Christian Bulgarian from Vidin
    3. Muslim Bulgarian from Vidin
  • Vilayet of Prizren;
    Vilayet of Scutari
  • 1: Muslim woman from Prizren 2. Farmers from around Prizren 3. Christian peasant woman from Matefse
    1: Muslim woman from Prizren
    2. Farmers from around Prizren
    3. Christian peasant woman from Matefse
  • 1: Hodja from Shkodër 2. Christian priest from Shkodër
    1:
    Hodja
    from Shkodër
    2. Christian priest from Shkodër
  • 1: Muslim lady from Shkodër 2. Christian lady from Shkodër 3. Peasant woman from Malissor
    1: Muslim lady from Shkodër
    2. Christian lady from Shkodër
    3. Peasant woman from Malissor
  • 1: Muslim from Shkodër 2. Muslim lady from Shkodër
    1: Muslim from Shkodër
    2. Muslim lady from Shkodër
  • 1: Christian from Shkodër 2. Christian lady from Shkodër
    1: Christian from Shkodër
    2. Christian lady from Shkodër
  • 1: Shepherd and peasant woman from Malissor
    1: Shepherd and peasant woman from Malissor
  • Vilayet of Bosnia
  • Vilayet of Crete
  • 1. Christian burgher from Chania 2. Christian horseman from Chania 3. Muslim lady from Chania
    1. Christian burgher from Chania
    2. Christian horseman from Chania
    3. Muslim lady from Chania
  • 1. Female Christian villager from Chania 2. Christian villager from Chania 3. Inhabitant of Sfakia
    1. Female Christian villager from Chania
    2. Christian villager from Chania
    3. Inhabitant of Sfakia
  • 1. Muslim Artisan man and woman from Çanakkale
    1. Muslim Artisan man and woman from Çanakkale
  • 1. Yorouk (nomad) from Biga 2. Christian inhabitant of Chios 3. Christian from Lemnos
    1.
    Yorouk (nomad) from Biga
    2. Christian inhabitant of Chios
    3. Christian from Lemnos
  • 1. Yorouk woman from Biga 2. Christian woman from Chios 3. Christian woman from Lemnos
    1. Yorouk woman from Biga
    2. Christian woman from Chios
    3. Christian woman from Lemnos
  • 1. Muslim from Rhodes 2. Muslim lady from Rhodes
    1. Muslim from Rhodes
    2. Muslim lady from Rhodes
  • 1. Jew from Rhodes 2. Jewish woman from Rhodes
    1. Jew from Rhodes
    2. Jewish woman from Rhodes
  • 1. Christian inhabitant of Lesbos 2. Christian woman from Lesbos 3. Christian woman from Symi
    1. Christian inhabitant of Lesbos
    2. Christian woman from Lesbos
    3. Christian woman from Symi
  • 1. Christian inhabitant of Famagusta 2. Christian woman from Famagusta 3. Greek religious man of the Tchiko Monastery, near Lefka
    1. Christian inhabitant of Famagusta
    2. Christian woman from Famagusta
    3. Greek religious man of the Tchiko Monastery, near Lefka
  • Vilayet of Hudavendigar
  • 1. Turkmen from around Bursa
    1.
    Turkmen from around Bursa
  • 1. Peasant man and woman from around Bursa (wearing wedding clothing) 2. Seis (horse groom)
    1. Peasant man and woman from around Bursa (wearing wedding clothing)
    2. Seis (horse groom)
  • 1. Jew and Jewish woman from Bursa
    1. Jew and Jewish woman from Bursa
  • Vilayet of Aydın
  • 1. Zeibek 2. Artisan from Aydın
    1. Zeibek
    2. Artisan from Aydın
  • 1. Christian merchant from Aydın 2. Haham from İzmir 3. Burgher from Manisa
    1. Christian merchant from Aydın
    2.
    Haham from İzmir
    3. Burgher from Manisa
  • 1. Muslim lady from Manisa 2. Muslim lady from İzmir
    1. Muslim lady from Manisa
    2. Muslim lady from İzmir
  • Vilayet of Konia
  • 1. Christian from Konya 2. Muslim horseman from Konya 3. Inhabitant of Elmalı
    1. Christian from Konya
    2. Muslim horseman from Konya
    3. Inhabitant of Elmalı
  • 1. Armenian Priest from Konya 2. Mullah from Konya 3. Greek Priest from Konya
    1. Armenian Priest from Konya
    2. Mullah from Konya
    3. Greek Priest from Konya
  • 1. Burgher from Konya 2. Greek woman from Burdur 3. Muslim woman from Burdur
    1. Burgher from Konya
    2. Greek woman from Burdur
    3. Muslim woman from Burdur
  • 1. Armenian woman from Burdur 2. Turkmen woman from Karie de Outmouk 3. Kurdish woman from Sarıkaya
    1. Armenian woman from Burdur
    2. Turkmen woman from Karie de Outmouk
    3. Kurdish woman from Sarıkaya
  • Vilayet of Ankara
  • 1. Muslim Artisan from Ankara 2. Christian Artisan from Ankara 3. Kurd from around Yozgat
    1. Muslim Artisan from Ankara
    2. Christian Artisan from Ankara
    3. Kurd from around Yozgat
  • 1. Bashi-bazouk from Ankara 2. Muslim peasant from around Ankara 3. Muslim peasant woman from around Ankara
    1. Bashi-bazouk from Ankara
    2. Muslim peasant from around Ankara
    3. Muslim peasant woman from around Ankara
  • 1. Kurdish woman from around Yozgat 2. Female Christian artisan from Ankara 3. Muslim female artisan from Ankara
    1. Kurdish woman from around Yozgat
    2. Female Christian artisan from Ankara
    3. Muslim female artisan from Ankara
  • Vilayet of Kastamonu
  • Vilayet of Sivas
  • 1. Turkish woman from Osmancık 2. Muslim artisan from Amasya 3. Christian lady from Tokat
    1. Turkish woman from Osmancık
    2. Muslim artisan from Amasya
    3. Christian lady from Tokat
  • 1. Muslim woman from Sivas 2. Armenian woman from Sivas 3. Kurdish woman from around Sivas
    1. Muslim woman from Sivas
    2. Armenian woman from Sivas
    3. Kurdish woman from around Sivas
  • Vilayet of Trebizond
  • 1. Muslim from Trabzon 2. Muslim peasant woman from around Trabzon 3. Laz man
    1. Muslim from Trabzon
    2. Muslim peasant woman from around Trabzon
    3. Laz man
  • 1. Muslim lady from Trabzon (indoor dress) 2. Muslim lady from Trabzon (outdoor dress)
    1. Muslim lady from Trabzon (indoor dress)
    2. Muslim lady from Trabzon (outdoor dress)
  • Vilayet of Erzerum
  • Vilayet of Diyarbekir
  • 1. Muslim from Diyarbakır 2. Christian from Diyarbakır 3. Kurd from Palu
    1. Muslim from Diyarbakır
    2. Christian from Diyarbakır
    3. Kurd from Palu
  • 1. Muslim lady from Diyarbakır. 2. Christian lady from Diyarbakır 3. Kurdish woman from Palu
    1. Muslim lady from Diyarbakır.
    2. Christian lady from Diyarbakır
    3. Kurdish woman from Palu
  • 1. Shepherd from around Diyarbakır 2. A Kurd from Cizre 3. Kurd from around Mardin
    1. Shepherd from around Diyarbakır
    2. A Kurd from Cizre
    3. Kurd from around Mardin
  • 1. Muslim lady from Sa'nt (indoor clothing) 2. Muslim lady from Sa'nt (outdoor clothing) 3. Kurdish woman from Elazığ
    1. Muslim lady from Sa'nt (indoor clothing)
    2. Muslim lady from Sa'nt (outdoor clothing)
    3. Kurdish woman from Elazığ
  • Vilayet of Aleppo
  • 1. Bedouin from the vilayet of Aleppo 2. Bedouin woman from the vilayet of Aleppo 3. Jewish lady from Aleppo
    1. Bedouin from the vilayet of Aleppo
    2. Bedouin woman from the vilayet of Aleppo
    3. Jewish lady from Aleppo
  • 1. Muslim from around Adana 2. Muslim woman from around Tarsus 3. Inhabitant of Hadjin
    1. Muslim from around
    Hadjin
  • Vilayet of Syria
  • 1. Christian inhabitant of Beirut (summer dress) 2. Muslim lady from Beirut 3. Christian lady from Beirut (winter dress)
    1. Christian inhabitant of Beirut (summer dress)
    2. Muslim lady from Beirut
    3. Christian lady from Beirut (winter dress)
  • 1. Muslim from Lebanon 2. Muslim woman from Lebanon
    1. Muslim from Lebanon
    2. Muslim woman from Lebanon
  • 1. Christian mountain dweller, from Zahlé (Lebanon) 2. Christian mountain dweller, from Zgharta (Lebanon) 3. Druze from Lebanon
    1. Christian mountain dweller, from Zahlé (Lebanon)
    2. Christian mountain dweller, from Zgharta (Lebanon)
    3. Druze from Lebanon
  • 1. Christian woman from Zahlé (Lebanon) 2. Christian woman from Zgharta (Lebanon) 3. Druze woman from Lebanon
    1. Christian woman from Zahlé (Lebanon)
    2. Christian woman from Zgharta (Lebanon)
    3. Druze woman from Lebanon
  • 1. Bedouin from Mount Lebanon. 2. Bedouin woman from Lebanon
    1. Bedouin from Mount Lebanon.
    2. Bedouin woman from Lebanon
  • 1. Fellah from around Damascus 2. Druze from around Damascus 3. Arab nomad woman from the Ourban tribe
    1. Fellah from around Damascus
    2. Druze from around Damascus
    3. Arab nomad woman from the Ourban tribe
  • 1. Fellah woman from around Damascus 2. Druze woman from around Damascus 3. Lady from Damascus
    1. Fellah woman from around Damascus
    2. Druze woman from around Damascus
    3. Lady from Damascus
  • 1. Christian artisan from Belka 2. Artisan woman from Belka 3. Peasant Muslim woman from around Belka
    1. Christian artisan from Belka
    2. Artisan woman from Belka
    3. Peasant Muslim woman from around Belka
  • 1. Shopkeeper from Belka 2. Fellah from around Belka 3. Muslim artisan from Belka
    1. Shopkeeper from Belka
    2. Fellah from around Belka
    3. Muslim artisan from Belka
  • 1. Jew from Jerusalem 2. Jewish woman from Jerusalem
    1. Jew from Jerusalem
    2. Jewish woman from Jerusalem
  • 1. Arab lady from Jerusalem 2. Fellah from around Jerusalem 3. Fellah woman from around Jerusalem
    1. Arab lady from Jerusalem
    2. Fellah from around Jerusalem
    3. Fellah woman from around Jerusalem
  • Vilayets of
    Tripolitania
  • 1. Arab man of the Shammar tribe 2. Arab man from Zubaid tribe 3. Muslim lady from Baghdad
    1. Arab man of the Shammar tribe
    2. Arab man from Zubaid tribe
    3. Muslim lady from Baghdad
  • 1. A'alim from Mecca 2. Inhabitant from Djeaddele (environs of Mecca) 3. Baveri of the guard of the Sharif of Mecca
    1. A'alim from Mecca
    2. Inhabitant from Djeaddele (environs of Mecca)
    3. Baveri of the guard of the Sharif of Mecca
  • 1. Kabyle of the Harb tribe (environs of Medina) 2. Kabyle woman of the Harb tribe (environs of Medina) 3. Muslim woman from Djeaddele (environs of Mecca)
    1.
    Harb tribe
    (environs of Medina)
    2. Kabyle woman of the Harb tribe (environs of Medina)
    3. Muslim woman from Djeaddele (environs of Mecca)
  • 1. A'alim from Al Hudaydah 2. Burgher from Al Hudaydah 3. Muslim lady from Sana'a
    1. A'alim from
    Sana'a
  • 1. Shopkeeper from Mocha 2. Muslim lady from Mecca 3. Moorish girl from Tripoli
    1. Shopkeeper from
    Mocha
    2. Muslim lady from Mecca
    3. Moorish girl from Tripoli

See also

Notes

  1. OCLC 815521945.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link
    )
  2. .
  3. .
  4. ^ Charlotte Jirousek. Ottoman Costumes: From Textile to Identity. S Faroqhi and C. Neumann, ed. Istanbul: Eren Publishing, 2005.
  5. ^ Inal, Onur. "Women's Fashions in Transition: Ottoman Borderlands and the Anglo-Ottoman Exchange of Costumes." Journal of World History 22.2 (2011): 243–72. Web. p. 234
  6. ^ Inal, p. 252
  7. ^ Jirousek, p. 8
  8. ^ Inal, p. 264
  9. ^ Inal, p. 258
  10. ^ Jirousek, p. 9
  11. ^ a b Jirousek, p. 2
  12. ^ a b Jirousek, p. 12
  13. ^ Inal, p. 253

References

  • Feyzi, Muharrem. Eski Türk Kıyafetleri ve Güzel Giyim Tarzları.
  • Koçu, Reşat Ekrem (1967). Türk Giyim Kuşam ve Süslenme Sözlüğü. Ankara: Sümerbank.
  • .Küçükerman, Önder (1966). . Türk Giyim Sanayinin Tarihi Kaynakları. İstanbul: GSD Dış Ticaret AŞ.
  • Sevin, Nurettin (1990). Onüç Asırlık Türk Kıyafet Tarihine Bir Bakış. Ankara: T.C. Kültür Bakanlığı.
  • .Tuğlac, Pars (1985). Osmanlı Saray Kadınları / The Ottoman Palace Women. Istanbul: Cem Yayınevi.

External links