Argon (clothing)
An Argon (also called Agon, Agrun or Parsa) is a traditional shawl-like garment worn by Hajong women in the Indian subcontinent, in modern-day India and Bangladesh.[1]
Type | Shawl |
---|---|
Material | Silk, Cotton |
Place of origin | India |
It was a form of festive wear, worn during special occasions. Argons are shuttle-woven and characterized by large-scale, symmetrical patterns, featuring geometrical shapes and stylized leaves and flowers in colored silks and with or without gold and silver threads. Traditionally argons used to be very large in size and would have birds like herons, ducks and peacocks; and trees like kadamba tree brocaded on them. It can be worn by men during weddings or when attending religious ceremonies.
Gallery
- Details of brocaded patterns on an argon.
- Women traditionally use the Argon to cover their left shoulder.
- Chiwar Phul motif woven along the edges.
- Hajong girls in traditional clothing.
- Traditional Hajong Clothing.
- Argons with 'bugri phul' (black) and 'chiwar phul' (green) motif along the borders.
- Traditional Hajong ornaments placed upon an Argon.
gollark: They are listed under "quarantined" on the side.
gollark: For national security reasons, they are quarantined in a subset of channels, mostly.
gollark: Hi. You want <#733816666089062511> for bots.
gollark: I think it's bruteforcing invite links. Not that it'll work.
gollark: I think we have at least 20 music bots, so feel free to enjoy™ music™?
See also
References
- Hajong, B. (2002). The Hajongs and their struggle. Assam, Janata Press.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.