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Traditional Attire Collection (page 3)

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: Warriors of the nomadic Afar tribe wear their hair

Warriors of the nomadic Afar tribe wear their hair long and carry large curved daggers, known as jile, strapped to their waists

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: A Mursi woman wearing a large clay lip plate

A Mursi woman wearing a large clay lip plate. Shortly before marriage, a girls lower lip will be pierced and progressively stretched over a year or so

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: A Karo man with braided hair plays a traditional stringed

A Karo man with braided hair plays a traditional stringed instrument beside the Omo River near Duss. Young men settle disputes by fighting with hippo hide whips

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: A Dassanech man in full tribal regalia participates

A Dassanech man in full tribal regalia participates in a dance during a month-long ceremony. He wears a cheetah skin draped on his backs and a black ostrich-feather headdress

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: Japan, Wakayama Prefecture, Kumano Kodo Pilgrimage Trail (UNESCO Site), Japanese

Japan, Wakayama Prefecture, Kumano Kodo Pilgrimage Trail (UNESCO Site), Japanese Cedars Forest

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: Japan, Kyoto, Historic Higashiyama district, To-ji Pagoda

Japan, Kyoto, Historic Higashiyama district, To-ji Pagoda

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: Two Msai men silhouetted on a hill at sunset

Two Msai men silhouetted on a hill at sunset

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: Two Datoga men participate in a mock stick fight

Two Datoga men participate in a mock stick fight. The Datoga (known to their Msai neighbours as the Mang ati and to the Iraqw as Babaraig) live in northern Tanzania and are primarily pastoralists

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: Two young Datoga boys

Two young Datoga boys. The youngest wears metal bells around his ankles to ensure that he does not wander far from home without his mother or another member of the family hearing him

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: A young Datoga boy attired in beads

A young Datoga boy attired in beads. The metal bells worn around his ankles ensure that he does not wander far from home without his mother or another member of the family hearing him

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: A Hadza boy carrying a bow and arrows

A Hadza boy carrying a bow and arrows.The Hadzabe are a thousand-strong community of hunter-gatherers who have lived in the Lake Eyasi basin for centuries

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: Hadza youth sings to the accompaniment of his two-stringed musical instrument

Hadza youth sings to the accompaniment of his two-stringed musical instrument
Sitting on a Greater Kudu skin, a Hadza youth wearing a baboon skin cape sings to the accompaniment of his two-stringed musical instrument.The Hadzabe are a thousand-strong community of

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: Datoga baby on his mothers back

Datoga baby on his mothers back
A Datoga baby is carried in a leather carrier on his mothers back The traditional attire of Datoga women includes beautifully tanned and decorated leather dresses

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: Msai warriors draw water for livestock from a well

Msai warriors draw water for livestock from a well
Msai draw water for livestock from a well

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: Deep Msai wells at Loibor Serrit

Deep Msai wells at Loibor Serrit where cattle paths are cut deep into the soil to allow livestock nearer to the source of water

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: A young Msai herdsboy

A young Msai herdsboy controls his familys cattle at the Sanjan River to prevent too many animals watering at the same time

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: Three Msai girls at Shimu la Mungu

Three Msai girls at Shimu la Mungu
Three Msai girls sit on the edge of Shimu la Mungu (a volcanic blow hole known as Gods hole ) with the extinct volcano, Kerimasi, in the distance

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: A Wa-Arusha warrior carries home a yoke

A Wa-Arusha warrior carries home a yoke. His brown necklace is made from aromatic wood. The Wa-Arusha are closely related to the Msai and speak the same _maa language

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: A Msai woman in traditional attire

A Msai woman in traditional attire. The preponderance of white glass beads in her ornaments denotes that she is from the Kisongo section of the Msai, the largest clan group

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: Msai - old and new

Msai - old and new
Old and new. Dressed traditionally and carrying familiar wooden staff, two young men give hints that the lifestyle of younger Msai generations is changing gradually in Tanzania

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: Young Datoga man in a well

Young Datoga man in a well
A young Datoga man helps to draw water for his familys livestock from a well on the east side of Lake Manyara. All young men wear strings of twisted yellow and light blue beads round their waists

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: A young Datoga boy

A young Datoga boy
A young boy of the Datoga tribe crosses the plains east of Lake Manyara in Northern Tanzania. The Manyara escarpment (a western boundary wall of the Gregory Rift) is visible in the distance

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: A Hadza hunter

A Hadza hunter wearing a baboon skin returns to camp with a haunch of impala over his shoulder. He killed the antelope with a metal-tipped arrow that had been dipped in a fast-acting vegetable poison

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: A Hadza hunter fledges an arrow shaft

A Hadza hunter fledges an arrow shaft
A Hadza hunter wearing a baboon skin fledges an arrow shaft with guinea fowl feathers using the sinews of an antelope.The Hadzabe are a thousand-strong community of hunter-gatherers who have lived in

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: A Hadza hunter smokes cannabis from a crude stone pipe

A Hadza hunter smokes cannabis from a crude stone pipe
A Hadza hunter wearing a genet cat skin cape smokes cannabis from a crude stone pipe sheathed in leather.The Hadzabe are a thousand-strong community of hunter-gatherers who have lived in the Lake

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: Members of a Folklore Dance group waiting to perform

Members of a Folklore Dance group waiting to perform, Merida, Yucatan State

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: A nomad sits in the desert and talks on his mobile phone

A nomad sits in the desert and talks on his mobile phone. It should be noted that it is not always possible to recieve a signal

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: Mauritania, Brakna, Desert Guide

Mauritania, Brakna, Desert Guide

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: Mauritania, Tagant, Mauritanian guide in the desert

Mauritania, Tagant, Mauritanian guide in the desert

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: A mullah sits benath a tree outside the Mausoleum of

A mullah sits benath a tree outside the Mausoleum of Bakhautdin Naqshband, one of Sufisms most important shrines

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: The twice-weekly market at Kisoro is a hive of activity

The twice-weekly market at Kisoro is a hive of activity with women selling their farm produce to traders from all over Uganda

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: A Himba woman in traditional attire. Her body gleams from a mixture of red ochre

A Himba woman in traditional attire. Her body gleams from a mixture of red ochre, butterfat and herbs. Her long hair is styled in the traditional Himba way

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: A Himba woman in traditional attire

A Himba woman in traditional attire. Her body gleams from a mixture of red ochre, butterfat and herbs. Her long hair is styled in the traditional Himba way

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: A Himba mother and baby son relax outside their dome-shaped home

A Himba mother and baby son relax outside their dome-shaped home. Their bodies gleam from a mixture of red ochre, butterfat and herbs

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: Almost every Himba woman wears anklets

Almost every Himba woman wears anklets. They comprise strands of homemade metal beads threaded onto leather. Women cover their bodies in red ochre mixed with butterfat

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: A Samburu initiate with bird skins hanging from his headband

A Samburu initiate with bird skins hanging from his headband. While their wounds heal for a month after circumcision, initiates spend their time wandering in the countryside attempting to kill as

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: A Samburu initiate takes aim at a bird with a blunt arrow

A Samburu initiate takes aim at a bird with a blunt arrow. While their wounds heal for a month after circumcision, initiates spend their time wandering in the countryside attempting to kill as many

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: A Samburu mother shaves her sons head outside

A Samburu mother shaves her sons head outside her home the day before he is circumcised. Round her neck hangs his nchipi - the distinctive decoration of every boy who participates in the circumcision

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: Mothers rub animal fat into their sons cloaks

Mothers rub animal fat into their sons cloaks to make them supple. This task is performed shortly before the boys set out on an arduous journey to collect sticks, staves and gum to make bows

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: A Samburu youth is forcibly restrained after throwing

A Samburu youth is forcibly restrained after throwing a fit in the tension-filled days leading up to his circumcision. It is not uncommon for Samburu youths and warriors to succumb to hysterical

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: A Turkana woman sitting in the doorway of her hut

A Turkana woman sitting in the doorway of her hut. Her heavy mporro braided necklace identifies her as a married woman. Typical of her tribe

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: A Turkana woman

A Turkana woman, typically wearing many layers of bead necklaces and a series of hooped earrings with an pair of leaf-shaped earrrings at the front, sits in the entrance to her hut

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: El Molo fishermen in their dugout canoe on the fringe

El Molo fishermen in their dugout canoe on the fringe of the Omo Delta. The El Molo are reputedly Kenyas smallest tribe, a group of nomadic fishermen who fish the Omo delta and Lake turkana

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: A Msai warrior speaks on his mobile phone from the

A Msai warrior speaks on his mobile phone from the saddle of his camel near Lake Magadi in Kenyas Rift Valley Province. Mobile phones are a popular method of communicating with family

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: Msai men lead a camel caravan laden with equipment

Msai men lead a camel caravan laden with equipment for a fly camp (a small temporary camp) past Lake Magadi. Clouds hang low over the Nguruman Escarpment (a western wall of the Great Rift Valley)

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: Gabbra women sing and dance to celebrate a wedding

Gabbra women sing and dance to celebrate a wedding. The traditional metal ornamentation on their heads is called malmal

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: Lookout

Lookout

Background imageTraditional Attire Collection: A large gathering of Msai warriors

A large gathering of Msai warriors, resplendent with long Ochred braids, listen to instructions from their chiefs and elders during a ceremony



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