Koleksi Busana Islami dari Manet

Dalam koleksi BAJU Busana Muslim Online, kami menampilkan 3 (tiga) kategori produk utama dari Manet untuk para wanita muslim Indonesia, yaitu blus, busana setelan, serta gamis.
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Untuk melihat detail tiap item produk busana ini kami anjurkan agar anda memulainya dari katalog busana muslim Manet yang telah kami siapkan bagi anda.
Detail ukuran busana produksi Manet
Catatan: Ukuran adalah dalam Cm.
| Size Pack Blus/Gamis | Ukuran S | Ukuran M | Ukuran L | Ukuran XL |
| Lingkar badan | 95 | 100 | 105 | 110 |
| Lebar bahu | 38 | 39 | 40 | 42 |
| Panjang tangan | 57 | 57 | 57 | 57 |
| Panjang blus/gamis | 80/140 | 80/140 | 80/140 | 80/140 |
Koleksi busana muslim: KéKé | 2Niq | Sik Clothing | Qirani | Manet | Azka | dZafeera | Layali | Toyusin | Ukhti | Dannis
Koleksi kriya & elemen estetis interior Islami: Kriya
Informasi lainnya: koleksi terbaru baju islami wanita dewasa, koleksi kerudung islami & jilbab, toko baju, koleksi terbaru baju islami pria dewasa, beranda informasi islami (faq), koleksi terbaru baju anak islami, butik baju, busana muslim wanita dewasa, koleksi baju & busana kerja islami, kontak baju busana muslim online, toko baju online, busana apparel, koleksi terbaru baju & busana muslim.
buku mengenai dunia fashion & clothing business
Natural Fashion: Tribal Decoration from Africa
The scene of tribal conflicts and guerrilla incursions, Ethiopia's Omo Valley is also home to fascinating rites and traditions that have survived for thousands of years. The nomadic people who inhabit the valley share a gift for body painting and elaborate adornments borrowed from nature, and Hans Silvester has captured the results in a series of photographs made over the course of numerous trips.
In this stunning collection of photographs, Silvester (Ethiopia: Peoples of the Omo Valley) celebrates the unique art of the Surma and Mursi tribes of the Omo Valley, on the borders of Ethiopia, Kenya and Sudan. These nomadic people have no architecture or crafts with which to express their innate artistic sense. Instead, they use their bodies as canvases, painting their skin with pigments made from powdered volcanic rock and adorning themselves with materials obtained from the world around them-such as flowers, leaves, grasses, shells and animal horns.
The adolescents of the tribes are especially adept at this art, and Silvester's superb photographs show many youths who, imbued with an exquisite sense of color and form, have painted their beautiful bodies with colorful dots, stripes and circles, and encased themselves in elaborate arrangements of vegetation and found objects. This art is endlessly inventive, magical and, above all, fun.
















