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Home » Categories » Fashion » Other Fashion » Caftans- Splendor For Plus Sizes » Reprint Rights » Printer Friendly

Caftans- Splendor For Plus Sizes

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Submitted Sunday, November 18, 2007
Marie Wakefield (30)

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Only if you have an interest in learning more about caftans for plus size beauty should you read this article. It provides all you want to know about caftans' history and why its great for plus size looks.

DID YOU KNOW-Many foreign garments are copied or borrowed of necessity.

Also spelled, Kaftan; it was originally a man's full-length garment of ancient Mesopotamian origin, worn throughout the  Middle East. Caftan-like robes can be seen depicted in the palace reliefs of ancient Persia dating to 600 B.C.  A number of the traditional garments were originally derived from ancient cultures in the region, particularly from Persia (Iran) and farther east in India, Mongolia, and Asian Russia.

The caftan was an open, coat like garment, termed in ancient Persia a candys or kandys. Also worn extensively in the cooler climates of Mongolia and China, the style extended westward to become, eventually, the fashionable wear of the late Ottoman Empire.

During the 9th and 11th centuries, the caftan had been adopted as European court dress in a richer motif than ever, encrusted with jeweled embroideries and dyed in deep colors, especially purples and reds. Open down the center front, this coat like garment was shaped to fit at the back. For both sexes the caftan was accompanied by trousers, not full like the Middle Eastern types, but more elegantly and closely cut, especially on the legs where they were tucked into boot tops or worn over shoes.

By the thirteenth century, the style had spread into Eastern Europe and  Russia, where caftan styles provided the model for a number of different basic garments well into the nineteenth century.  The caftan tradition was particularly elaborate in the imperial wardrobes of the 16th Ottoman Empire in Anatolian Turkey. Caftans of varying lengths were made from rich satins, velvets and silks, shot through with metallic threads to be worn by courtiers to indicate status.

Caftan-style robes have been worn in many parts of the world where Islam has spread, particularly in North and West Africa. In parts of West Africa, the practice of layering robes to express the aesthetic principle of “bigness” in leadership dress and the giving of “robes of honor” is shared with the Ottoman tradition.

Subsequently, there were occasional vogues for Turkish dress in Italy, Germany, and England, and the caftan became the model for later Western garments featuring fitted backs and open fronts.

In Western culture, caftans became part of the international fashion scene in the mid-twentieth century. In the 1950s, French designer Christian Dior adapted the caftan style to design women’s floor-length evening coats. In the 1960s, the caftan as a unisex garment gained visibility as hippie trendsetters adopted ethnic dress. Largely through the influence of fashion maven Diana Vreeland, the editor of Vogue magazine, the caftan entered into the haute couture fashion scene.

With a long and elegant history- worn by emperors and kings, contemporary use of the term “caftan” can be broadened to encompass a number of similarly styled garment types. Today caftans may be worn with a sash or belt. Some caftans are open to the front or side and are tied or fastened with looped buttons running from neck to waist. Depending on use, caftans vary from hip to floor length.  The choice of fabric is limitless, though silks and cottons are still the most used.  Embellished, embroidered, bejeweled and other wise decked out, the caftan flatters any figure.

WIKIPEDIA SAYS-Most fabrics for royal Turkish caftans were manufactured in Istanbul and Bursa; but some came from as far as Venice,Genoa, Persia,India and even China.

I had never known how interesting writing about caftans for plus size would be, until I wrote this article. Hope you feel the same.

For more tips and information on plus size fashion with an <a href="http://www.fabulous-plus-sizes.com/Plus_Sizes_African_Dashiki_Bold_and_Sensible.html">ethnic flair</a> visit http://www.fabulous-plus-sizes.com/Site_Map.html a trendy plus size fashion website.






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