Yoruba clothing

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The Black Woman's Forgotten Fight against the Laws that Banned her Hair Africa Colors, Nigeria Independence, Duro Olowu, Nigerian Culture, Yoruba People, Evolution Of Fashion, African People, African Diaspora, African Culture

A young Creole woman in a tignon of her own creation. Painting from the Historic New Orleans Collection. There are many reasons why it’s not “just hair” for Black women. Before the "Black is Beautiful" and natural hair movement emerged during the 1960s, anti-Black hair sentiment in Western societ

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What is Aso-Òkè? Aso Oke (pronounced ah-SHOW-kay) is short for Aso Ilu Oke which literally interpreted means clothes from the countryside. It is also sometimes refereed to as Aso-Ofi. Ofi refers to the seat of the weavers sit on when weaving the cloth. It is a hand woven cloth made mostly by the Yoruba tribe of south west … Traditional Nigerian Clothing, Yoruba Outfit, Yoruba Clothing, Traditional Dress For Men, Traditional Wear For Men, Nigerian Outfits, Costume Africain, Native Wears, African Wedding Attire

What is Aso-Òkè? Aso Oke (pronounced ah-SHOW-kay) is short for Aso Ilu Oke which literally interpreted means clothes from the countryside. It is also sometimes refereed to as Aso-Ofi. Ofi refers to the seat of the weavers sit on when weaving the cloth. It is a hand woven cloth made mostly by the Yoruba tribe of south west …

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ArtStation - Oduduwa, Ayo Adelagun Black Royalty, African Royalty, Afrikaanse Mode, Art Premier, Afrocentric Art, African People, African History, Afro Art, 판타지 아트

Oduduwa,was the 1st Ooni, King of Ile-Ife with the titles "Olofin". His name, phonetically written by Yoruba language-speakers as Odùduwà and sometimes contracted as Ooduwa, Odudua or Oòdua, is generally ascribed to the ancestral dynasties of Yorubaland because he is held by the Yoruba to have been the ancestor of their numerous crowned kings. Following his posthumous deification, he was admitted to the Yoruba pantheon as an aspect of a primordial divinity of the same name.

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