Pakistani clothing refers to the ethnic clothing that is typically worn by people in the country of Pakistan and by Pakistanis. Pakistani clothes express the culture of Pakistan, the demographics of Pakistan, and cultures from Punjab, Sindh, Balochistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Gilgit-Baltistan, and Kashmir regions of the country. The clothing in each region and culture of Pakistan reflect weather conditions, way of living, the textiles and embroidery used and its distinctive style which gives it a unique identity among all cultures.

Pakistani national dress

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The Shalwar kameez, Achkan, Sherwani and Kurta shalwar Kameez are the national dresses of Pakistan[1][2] and is worn by men and women in all five provinces of Punjab, Sindh, Balochistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, and Gilgit-Baltistan in the country and in Azad Kashmir. Shalwar refers to loose trousers and kameez refers to shirts. Since 1982, all officials working in the secretariat are required to wear the national dress.[3] Each province has its own variant of salwar kameez such as Sindhi Salwar Khamis, Punjabi shalwar kameez, Pashtun shalwar kameez, and Balochi shalwar kameez. Pakistanis wear clothes ranging from exquisite colours and designs to various types of fabric such as silk, chiffon, cotton, etc.[4][5]

Men's clothing

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Men wear shalwar kameez, kurta, Pakistani Waistcoat, achkan and sherwani, churidar, or pajama. Other items of clothing include the jama and the angarkha. Headgear includes turbans, the Jinnah Cap, also called Karakul, Fez, also called Rumi Topi, and Taqiyah (cap). Peshawari chappal and Khussa are popular foot wear. Other items include traditional shawls made of Pashmina or other warm materials especially in the Northern regions of the country, mainly, Khyber Pakhtunkhwans usually wear the Pakol hat,

Every province has a different and unique cultural dress.

Ethnic & Regional clothing

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Balochistan

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In Balochistan, traditionally a long jama (robe) like a smock-frock is worn down to the heels, loose shalwar, a long chadar or scarf, a pagri of cotton cloth, and mostly shoes that narrow at the toe.[6] The material is thick cloth with a very wide shalwar to protect against the hot winds of the dry Sulaiman Range and Kharan Desert.

Sindh

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Sindhi style Salwar Khamis are common everyday dress nowadays,[7][8] Sindhi Salwar/Suthan is wider at waist and gets narrower below knees till ankles where it is loosely fitted, second style of salwar is Kancha which has very wide (Pancha) ankle-cuffs, used to be worn back in time, the third style of Shalwar has very less pleats or no pleats at all but is loose like pajamo. Sindhi Khamis is usually shorter, before the adoption of Khamis, Sindhi men used to wear Short angrakho called Angelo, later Sindhi Pehran/Pehriyan (a collarless Kurta tunic) tied at one side or in center resembling Sindhi Angelo was common, both Angelo and Pehriyan were sometimes embroidered with Sindhi embroideries and mirrorwork, Sindhi men also wear embroidered vests under the Khamis called "Ganji", while the different waistcoats (Koti, Sadri, Gidi, Kaba) were worn over tunics.[9] Some men in rural areas wear Sindhi lungi (only muslims) called "Godd", whereas hindus wore Dhoti or Treto while others wore tight fitting pajamas and a long Jama, the rich men wore Sherwanis with gold buttons. With clothes Sindhi men wore Sindhi Patko, Pagg or Phento (turbans), youngsters wore Sindhi cap, men carried Ajrak or any other locally made shawls/handkerchief were carried on shoulders.

Punjab

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Punjabi men wear the straight cut Punjabi shalwar kameez, kurta, or shalwar. Dhoti, lungi, or tehmat are often worn in rural areas.[10][11][12] Other Punjabi shalwar styles include the Pothohari shalwar,[13] Multani shalwar, Dhoti shalwar, and the Bahawalpuri shalwar which is very wide and baggy[14] with many folds. Turban of a thin cloth is also worn especially in rural areas of Punjab where it is called pagri. Footwear include the khussa and Peshawari chappal, which is also widely worn.

Khyber Pakhtunkhwa

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Pashtun dress differ according to region but usually people wear traditional Peshawari chappal[15] as footwear and a Pakol or turban as headwear. The traditional male Pashtun dress includes the Khet partug,[16] Peshawari shalwar, and the Patke tunban. Males usually wear kufi, Peshawari cap, turban, or Pakol as traditional headgear.

Gilgit-Baltistan

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Azad Kashmir

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The clothing of Azad Kashmir includes various styles of the shalwar kameez. It is called Pheran.

Women's clothing

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Shalwar kameez

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Pakistani women wear the shalwar kameez which is worn in different styles, colours, and designs which can be decorated with different styles and designs of embroidery. The kameez can be of varying sleeve length, shirt length, and necklines. The drawers can be the straight-cut shalwar, patiala salwar, churidar, cigarette pajama, tulip trouser, samosa pajama, or simple trouser

Dupatta

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A Pakistani woman wearing a dupatta

The Dupatta is treated just as an accessory in current urban fashion. Most women who carry it nowadays wear it just as a decorative accessory; it's usually worn wrapped around the neck or hanging down the shoulder. [Dupatta] is also used by some women when entering a mosque, dargah, where they cover their head with a dupatta while entering such places. It is widely worn by women in weddings and other parties out of choice and fashion. On such occasions, mostly it is wrapped around the waist, neck, or just draped on a shoulder. It is used with different embroidery designs of Kamdani and Gota.

Burqa

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In Pakistan, upper and middle-class women in towns wear burqas over their normal clothes in public.[17][18] The burqa is the most visible dress in Pakistan. It is a garment worn over the ordinary clothes and is made of white cotton. Many upper-class women wear a two-piece burqa which is usually black in colour but sometimes navy blue or dark red. It consists of a long cloak and a separate headpiece with a drop-down face veil. Some educated urban women no longer wear the burqa, while some of them wear Hijab as an alternative. The burqa is also not worn by rural peasant women who work in the fields.[19] In rural areas only elite women wear burqas.[17][18] Purdah is still common in the rural elite and urban middle class, but not among rural farmers.[20]

Bridal dresses

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Pakistani brides traditionally opt for lehengas, anarkalis, or shararas and ghararas. Most wear lehengas, popularly either with short lehenga cholis or a longer shalwar top. Lehengas are long skirts usually paired with a short blouse known as a choli, but can be paired with a long shalwar kameez. Anarkalis are also an option, imitating gowns. Shararas consist of a blouse or shalwar, with loose pants. Ghararas, are similar, except the pants are tight at the thighs and flare from the knee. All these options are normally intricately embroidered, and are moderately popular with Indian brides too.

Other traditional dresses

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On special occasions such as Eid more heavily embroidered iterations of the shalwar kameez are worn by Pakistani women.

Farshi Pajama is an old traditional dress which is worn occasionally. Laacha is worn in Punjab,[21] the lower part of which resembles the dhoti.

Regional clothing

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Balochistan

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The typical dress of a Baloch woman consists of a long frock and shalwar with a headscarf.[22] Balochi women wear heavy embroidered shalwar kameez and dupatta with the embroidery utilising Shisha work.[23] The Balochi Duch from Makran District is one of the many forms of Balochi dresses and is famous all across Balochistan. Since it is purely hand embroidered, Balochi Duch is expensive and it takes months to complete a single Balochi suit.

Sindh

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Sindhi women just like Sindhi men commonly wear Sindhi Salwar with wide and long Cholo (tunic) nowadays, with Sindhi embroideries and mirrorwork, along with large Sindhi veil (Rao, Gandhi, Poti), back In time the traditional dresses of Sindhi women varied from region to region, from tribe to tribe as much as that the clothes become mark of identification of one's tribe, but most common code of dresses were Sindhi Cholo/Choli of various styles and embroidered (Gaj/Aggoti), trousers salwars/suthan or pajamo was usually made of Soossi, silk or satin fabric and over salwars a wide Bandhani (tie and dye) cloth Paro/Ghaghro/Pashgeer/Jablo (skirt), or of Satin or Sossi fabric skirt.[24][23] while some Sindhi women wore long thobe like dresses called Jubo in Sindhi, and other Sindhi women wore frocks called (Ghagho, Abho or Fairak) in Sindhi.

Punjab

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Punjabi women wear the straight cut Punjabi shalwar kameez,[25] which is most frequently worn. Punjabi women, in villages, also wear the Pothohari shalwar, the Patiala shalwar, the laacha (tehmat),[26] kurti,[27] ghagra,[28] lehenga, and phulkari.

Khyber Pakhtunkhwa

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In urban areas women typically wear the shalwar kameez.[29] Pashtun women commonly wear shalwar kameez and in some regions, particularly in Tribal areas, women wear firaq partug which is also worn in neighbouring Afghanistan. In Kalash region, women wear embroidered long shirts.

Wedding dresses

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In Pakistan, the traditional wedding ceremony is celebrated by wearing different clothes in each wedding event. Usually, the style and designs of wedding attire vary across different regions from north to the south among different ethnic communities. However, in major urban cities such as Karachi, Lahore, Faisalabad, and Rawalpindi, on the occasion of the Rasm-e-Heena (Mendhi), men wear an embroidered Kameez in glittering colours with simple shalwar. Up to the wedding day, the bride may wear a yellow[30] or orange kameez, with a simple shalwar, Patiala shalwar,[31] yellow dupatta, and yellow paranda — more commonly in the Punjab region of Pakistan. However, in other regions customs vary. For example, in the north-west, particularly in the tribal areas, it is customary for a bride to wear Firaq Partug.

During Baraat and Walima functions, the groom usually wears kurta shalwar or kurta churidar with special sherwani and khussa. However, in some regions, including Balochistan, among Baloch and Pashtuns (in the north of the province), and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, mostly among Pashtuns and Kohistanis, grooms customarily wear simple, more often white, colour shalwar Kameez and a traditional Baloch Bugti Chappal (in Baloch dominated regions) or Peshawari Chappal in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and a traditional headwear such as the Pashtun style Patke or a Baloch style turban.

In Sindh the wedding clothing are usually cotton white or half white Salwar Khamis for men with white/ajrak/lungee Patko (turban), and embroidered Ajrak or Lungee (shawls) over shoulders, other extra red or pink embroidered chadar over shoulders, traditional "Morh" (Sehra), stick in one hand, "gano" wristband on other and a sword or dagger as well, the shoes are traditional Sindhi Jutti or Sandals. The Sindhi bride wear red color heavy embroidered Lehenga Choli/Cholo as wedding dress, with two veils and a lot of jewelries and ornaments.

In Punjab and Karachi, during the event of baraat, grooms may wear traditional sehra on their heads, and brides may normally wear a shalwar kameez.[32]

Pakistani clothing companies and brands

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The following is a list of notable Pakistani clothing companies and brands.

Pakistani fashion

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Pakistani fashion has flourished well in the changing environment of the fashion world. Since Pakistan came into being, its fashion has been historically evolved from different phases and made its unique identity. At this time, Pakistani fashion is a combination of traditional and modern styles and it has become the cultural identification of Pakistan. Despite all modern trends, the regional and traditional dresses have developed their own significance as a symbol of native tradition. This regional fashion is not static but evolving.

Pakistan Fashion Design Council, based in Lahore, organizes Fashion Week and Fashion Pakistan, based in Karachi, organizes fashion shows in that city. Credit goes to Ayesha Tammy Haq, a British-trained lawyer and chief executive of Fashion Pakistan, who came up with the idea for Pakistan’s first fashion week, held in November 2009.[33]

Pakistani fashion industry

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Pakistani fashion industry is introducing Pakistani traditional dresses all over the world as cultural representatives and is becoming a reason to introduce international trends in Pakistan. Pakistani media, Film Industry, and Internet have the biggest roles in promoting fashion in Pakistan. There are a lot of TV Channels, Magazines, Portals,[34] and websites which are working only for the fashion industry.

Pakistani fashion designers

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Pakistani fashion brands

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Pakistani fashion models

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The following is a list of Pakistani models.

Male models
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Female models
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Pakistani fashion stylists

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Pakistani stylists also have a major contribution in giving the celebrities a new look. Their work is also appreciated within and outside of Pakistan. Here is a list of Pakistani Fashion stylists[35]

Pakistani fashion events

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Extensive fashion activities are shown in Pakistani fashion events held in different parts of the country as well as abroad.

Pakistani fashion awards

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Pakistani fashion schools

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Here is a list of Pakistani fashion institutes.

Pakistani fashion media

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Here is a list of Pakistani fashion media.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Nobleman, Marc Tyler (2003) Pakistan
  2. ^ West, Barbara. A (2009) Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Asia and Oceania [1]
  3. ^ Ali Banuazizi, Myron Weiner (1986) The State, Religion, and Ethnic Politics: Afghanistan, Iran, and Pakistan; [this Vol. Had Its Origin in a Conference on "Islam, Ethnicity and the State in Afghanistan, Iran and Pakistan" ... Held in November 1982, in Tuxedo, New York] [2]
  4. ^ Koerner, Stephanie; Russell, Ian (16 August 2010). Unquiet Pasts: Risk Society, Lived Cultural Heritage, Re-Designing Reflexivity - Stephanie Koerner, Ian Russell - Google Books. Ashgate Publishing. ISBN 9780754675488. Retrieved 14 June 2012.
  5. ^ Qadeer. Mohammad (2006) Pakistan - Social and Cultural Transformations in a Muslim Nation [3]
  6. ^ Mir Khuda Bakhsh Marri (1974) Searchlights on Baloches and Balochistan
  7. ^ Hasan, Shaikh Khurshid (1996) Chaukhandi tombs in Pakistan
  8. ^ Gera, Nalini (2003) Ram Jethmalani: the authorized biography
  9. ^ Illustrated Weekly of Pakistan, Volume 20, Issues 27-39 (1968)
  10. ^ Pakistan culture (1997)
  11. ^ West Pakistan Year Book (1961)
  12. ^ Area Handbook for Pakistan (1975)
  13. ^ Mohinder Singh Randhawa. (1960) Punjab: Itihas, Kala, Sahit, te Sabiachar aad.Bhasha Vibhag, Punjab, Patiala
  14. ^ Current Opinion, Volume 25 (1899)
  15. ^ Shah, Danial (22 April 2009). "Peshawari Chappal | Flickr - Photo Sharing!". Flickr. Retrieved 14 June 2012.
  16. ^ Pathans: Compiled Under the Order of the Government of India at the Recruiting Office, Peshawar (1938) [4]
  17. ^ a b Latif, Abdul (1977). Population Census of Pakistan, 1972: Gujranwala. Manager of Publications. p. 9.
  18. ^ a b Latif, Abdul (1978). Population Census of Pakistan, 1972: Lahore. Manager of Publications. p. 9.
  19. ^ Nyrop, Richard (1975). Area Handbook for Pakistan. U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 109.
  20. ^ "Pakistan | History, Population, Religion, & Prime Minister | Britannica". Archived from the original on 19 October 2022. Retrieved 19 November 2022.
  21. ^ Focus on Pakistan, Volume 2 (1972)
  22. ^ Dashti, Naseer (2012) The Baloch and Balochistan: A Historical Account from the Beginning to the Fall of the Baloch State [5]
  23. ^ a b Illustrated Weekly of Pakistan, Volume 21, Issues 1-16
  24. ^ Peter J. Claus, Sarah Diamond, Margaret Ann Mills (2003) South Asian Folklore: An Encyclopedia : Afghanistan, Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka [6]
  25. ^ Tracey Skelton, Gill Valentine (2005) Cool Places: Geographies of Youth Cultures [7]
  26. ^ Nasreen Askari, Rosemary Crill (1997) Colours of the Indus: Costume and Textiles of Pakistan In the cities, straight-cut shalwars and pants are worn by majority. The females youngsters in the Punjab frequently wear jeans and short shirts or tee-shirts. id=jWRQAAAAMAAJ&q=lacha+punjabi+dress&dq=lacha+punjabi+dress&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0CFIQ6AEwB2oVChMI0LODq7KkxwIV7wrbCh16ogS8
  27. ^ Punjab District Gazetteers: Rawalpindi District (v. 28A) (1909)
  28. ^ Chaudhry, Nazir Ahmad (2002) Multan Glimpses: With an Account of Siege and Surrender [8]
  29. ^ Peter J. Claus, Sarah Diamond, Margaret Ann Mills (2003) South Asian Folklore: An Encyclopedia : Afghanistan, Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka [9]
  30. ^ Illustrated Weekly of Pakistan, Volume 20, Issues 27-39 (1968)
  31. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 15 October 2014. Retrieved 4 October 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  32. ^ Malik, Iftikhar Haider (2006) Culture and Customs of Pakistan
  33. ^ In Pakistan, fashion weeks thrive beyond the style capitals of the world
  34. ^ "What is a Portal?". Itservices.hku.hk. Retrieved 14 June 2012.
  35. ^ "List of top Pakistani Fashion Stylists at Fashion Central". Fashioncentral.pk. Retrieved 14 June 2012.