#muslim dress
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Bandaraya Jalan Masjid India
Bandaraya Jalan Masjid India Welcome, dear traveler! Are you ready to explore one of Kuala Lumpur’s most bustling and colorful districts? Join us as we stroll through Bandaraya Jalan Masjid India, It’s a well-known shopping district within the city that is particularly famous for its variety of shops selling hijabs, Muslim dresses, textiles, and other items. Let’s enjoy ourselves living in…
#bandaraya#fly me to kl#hijab#hotel regalia kuala lumpur#hotel regalia residence#jalan masjid india kuala lumpur#kuala lumpur malaysia#living in malaysia#lrt kuala lumpur#muslim dress#putra mall#rapid kl#regalia infinity pool klcc#regalia residence#regalia suites kl#rm#street food#textiles#vlog#what to do in kuala lumpur
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Reasons You Deserve Designer Cufflinks
Watches are likely the most popular accessory in the world. People of all ages, sex and nationality wear designer inspired watches on daily basis. Watches commenced as a necessity, then again gradually turn into style statement. Designer watches are worn above the world, including by biggest celebrities in every field.

Well, warm-headed! Islamic women can use their Hijab s into essential when seeking to stay good. If you will prioritize keeping your scalp warm, you will have won half the battle in keeping your warm this skiing. Why not wear two Hijab? Although, always take an umbrella with you - as the wet Hijab is never pleasant.
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Kaftan s obtainable many colours and sizes with discount prints. What's even better is that kaftans are so very versatile. Want to extend the wears because of your favourite kaftan, pop a singlet underneath, slip on some shorts and you could have a great summer look.
The jilbab is known by prayer time watch many names. It might be Athan clock referred to as the jilbaab. Others call it the manteau, which is French for mantle. Still others call it the jubbah.
These days, your handbag holds an issue is much different important - your pride and attitude. You buy your designer bag at a hefty price, and if you hung it to your arm, heads will turn as people your accoutrement.
Then may find the abayas, which are long black dresses/robes which could be worn over regular clothing. They may have a bit of embroidery to raise their decorativeness, but they usually only might be that color. However, the embroidery can come in a few different various hues.
Trousers, capris, culottes and flappers can be extremely much in instead of shalwar. Provides Pakistani and Indian fashion a new and a modernize physical appearance. Traditional shalwar kameez got a complete new including a modern look by replacing shalwar with trousers. Provides it a fresh stylish and stylish look yet it still looks certain.
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Special Ops: Lioness - 1x07
#specialopslionessedit#special ops lioness#special ops: lioness#aaliyah amrohi#cruz manuelos#stephanie nur#laysla de oliveira#special ops lioness 1x07#special ops lioness spoilers#aaliyah x cruz#femslash related stuff#muslim lgbt#god this ep was kind of perfect for what you'd expect at this stage of a spy/target story?#wow#it was hot it was heartbreaking#the conflict coming from cruz fully being into this#the dressing room scene and then them arriving here so single-minded#cruz scoping out the rooms and already taking her shoes off#aaliyah trying to be more patient but as soon as that door clicks the way she swings around#it's funny and sweet and sexy but so temporary :(
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𝙻𝚘𝚟𝚎 🤍
𝚃𝚠𝚘 𝚖𝚞𝚜𝚕𝚒𝚗 𝚍𝚛𝚎𝚜𝚜𝚎𝚜 𝚍𝚎𝚌𝚘𝚛𝚊𝚝𝚎𝚍 𝚠𝚒𝚝𝚑 𝚎𝚖𝚋𝚛𝚘𝚒𝚍𝚎𝚛𝚢, 1808 𝚊𝚗𝚍 1815
#fashion #fashiongram #fashionable #fashionphotography #fashionlover #fashionart #fashionaddict #fashionphotographer #fashionpost #fashionshoot #fashionlove #fashionlovers #fashioneditoral #editoral #catwalk @bixlasagna
𝙵𝚊𝚋𝚕𝚎𝚜 & 𝙵𝚊𝚒𝚛𝚢𝚝𝚊𝚕𝚎𝚜 - 𝙳𝚎𝚗𝚒𝚣 𝙺𝚞𝚛𝚝𝚎𝚕 𝚁𝚎𝚖𝚒𝚡 𝚋𝚢 𝙽/𝚊, 𝚁𝚘𝚜𝚒𝚗𝚊 ✨
#l o v e#hand made#nostalgia#take me there for one day#muslim#muslin#dresses#3/2024#feminism#magick#muslin dresses#embroidery#1808#19th century#vintage#vintage fashion#art history#orient#oriental#1815#aesthetic#x-heesy#now playing#music and art#vintage dress#chic#fashion#we Need magick#arabic
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#pretty#ebony#blackgirlmagic#melanin#melanin poppin#african beauty#black queen#black fashion#chocolate#brown skin#muslim fashion#modest#pretty face#black is beautiful#beautiful skin#black woman#womens fashion#fashion dress#beautiful women#black tumblr#muslimah#modesty
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@bubbletea4ever I'm responding to your comment in a separate post since my answer got too long and I then just decided to properly make my case.
(For anyone else stumbling here, here's the post in which comments we were discussing. There's couple of comments before this, so if you want more context, you are free to check them out.)
So here's @bubbletea4ever 's comment:
so you can understand that regimes can control and influence how people dress, but you can’t see that a culture does the same? If you ask women who veil their faces why they do it, how many of them do you seriously think are going to say ‘to protect me from the sun’ ? covering your face is dehumanising to yourself. you can pretend it’s neutral but it’s not. there’s not a world where this means nothing, it’s inherently oppressive that women just so happen to be the sex whose awra seemingly includes everything but the face and yet even some believe they should cover that. It is inherently oppressive that there are women who choose to swim in clothes that puts them at further risk of drowning in the name of piousness. And I said it’s cultural imperialism because that’s precisely what it is. Not every niqabi is from the specific region of Saudi where this began. This sort of regression only had a resurgence because of petro-Islam.
Of course people don't usually actively think about their clothing's origin or practical purpose. Culture forms around the practice and assigns symbolism and meaning to it. If you ask most people of the world "why are you not going out in your underwear?" they will probably not answer by "because of western hegemony we are all wearing clothing that originates from Europe and in European climate layering is the best strategy to keep you warm but not overheated or sweaty". They will most likely answer "it's not appropriate". Yes, the reason today many Muslim women wear any kind of veil, including niqab, are usually religious reasons (weather by choice or not), but my point in my original response was to show that these clothing are not just tools of oppression or just religious symbols, they are also practical useful garments which have long history, just like any other traditional clothing item from different cultures. My point was that while they can take different meanings, none of those meanings are inherent to them.
When I mentioned enforcing and controlling how people dress I of course mean also other means of control than just legal means. But there is a difference in controlling societal structures and cultural norms, though the line between those two is often hazy. All cultures ever have had some social standards and norms for dress. My previous example works here as well. In modern globalized culture it's deemed inappropriate to be naked or even in just the underwear in public. However, there is nothing inherently inappropriate in it. In many cultures thorough history, mostly those originating from hot and at least semi-humid climates, it has been entirely appropriate to appear almost or fully naked in public, and the concept of underwear itself is not even universal. Even in Early Modern Europe it was very appropriate for certain women in certain situations to appear in public their breasts fully exposed (I have a post where I explain the phenomena). However, in modern globalized culture it's not. I wouldn't call that inherently oppressive though. Historically using veils (even face coverings in desert climates) was often more of a neutral cultural norm like the one I just described rather than a tool of societal control, including in Europe, where veils and other head coverings were for a long time part of the standard dress (also originally for practical reasons). (I'm not saying this was always the case thorough history, I can already think of some examples which cross the hazy line to more of an oppressive standard, but broadly speaking.) Of course, I do know that in many modern Muslim societies, even when there's no outright laws enforcing it, there is very much societally enforced pressure especially for women to wear certain clothing, which is oppressive. Still the garments themselves are not oppressive.
I think it's interesting you say covering your face is inherently dehumanizing. Why is that? What makes covering your face specifically dehumanizing? Is covering your eyes dehumanizing? For example would you consider using sunglasses as dehumanizing?
I'll give you an example to better explain how I see this. In Victorian Era western societies it was societally enforced standard for women to only wear skirts and never pants. That was oppressive. Are skirts then oppressive? I certainly wouldn't agree with that. Some feminist women did push against this oppression and wore pants. There were also women who agreed that it's oppressive to control what women wear but still choose to wear skirts. Was the only reason they choose to wear skirts because of this oppressive standard? For some it certainly was because they were afraid of the backlash, which was severe at first. But for others it clearly wasn't, because some of them did dress in very unconventional manner directly contrasting the contemporary beauty norms, but still wearing skirts. Would it have been a good way to dismantle this norm by demanding that no woman ever wears a skirt? Absolutely not. There would be just another type of control. (I write a bit more on that history in this post.) Another example. At the same time men were not allowed to wear skirts in public (outside very specific situations like when they were small children or when they were a Scott wearing a kilt). During Victorian Era many countries had laws against cross dressing, but even to this day it's not socially acceptable for men to wear skirts in western and most westernized countries. Even if there's no longer laws against it, our oppressive social structures still enforce that. So are pants then oppressive? Of course not. Should all men stop wearing pants? No, they should be allowed to wear skirts or pants. Should I assume that every man ever wearing pants is only doing it because they are oppressed by the societal standards of dress? I do not think so. My thinking is exactly the same about niqab and other Muslim and Arab garments.
In your previous comment you said the prevalence of face covering as a whole is due to imperialism, which is what I disagreed with, at least with the "as a whole" part, because as I said, face coverings have long been used in many arid, especially desert, environments, not just Arabia. Niqab term and the specific form comes from Arabia, but very similar types of face coverings are not exclusive to Arabia nor even to Islam, nor do they originate with either of them. There's even historical examples from Europe of the practice of face coverings in certain areas (for example in parts of Germany during the Renaissance, but this is veering quite off the point). Face coverings have been recorded in Levant in pre-Islamic historical accounts as well, as this academic article on the misconceptions about nicab explains (this paper informs my opinion in this subject a lot). Coptic Orthodox women, who are Christians who originate around Eqypt, traditionally wore black veils and face coverings as seen in the photo from 1918 below. Tuaregs (one of the Amazigh peoples of North Africa), both men and women, but particularly men, have also worn face coverings called Litham for centuries, as seen in the second image from 1897. Litham is a veil that also covers the face, and is often worn by men as a turban. In Central Asia face coverings have also been used for a long time, chaderi has been used in Afghanistan for several hundred years, as seen in the third image, an illustration from c. 1840.



These are just a few examples and my point with them is to illustrate niqab style face coverings are not exclusive to Saudi Arabia, and certainly not to Najd alone, so calling all face coverings outside Najd Saudi imperialism is simply not true. Saudi Arabia is certainly an imperial entity and historically Arab imperialism has been in a cultural hegemony position in the MENA area. However, Arab imperialism is certainly not the only kind of imperialism effecting MENA societies. Similarly as Arabic cultural products are pushed on many Muslims outside Arabia and even Arabic countries, so are western products. Would you think the only reason an Arab or a Muslim more broadly, man or a woman, would wear jeans or other western clothing is that they are oppressed by western imperialism? Would you condemn that usage of jeans?
It was also the western colonialism which enforced western cultural norms in many Arab and other Muslim countries, which led to the wave of westernization across MENA in the 20th century and the decline of the usage of traditional clothing, including veils and face coverings. Western world of course framed it as progress, because in the colonial framework the burden of the white man was to "civilize" non-white non-western societies. Everything non-western was then backwards and uncivilized. The Islamic backlash against this led to another kind of oppression, which is fueled by the continued western imperial presence in the area. Even Saudi Arabia is in the end just an arm of American imperialism. My point is traditional Islamic or Arab garments are not inherently more oppressive than western garments, what is oppressive when either is forced upon a culture and upon it's people.
#i did not comment on the swimwear part because i think that's beside the point#weather traditional arab garments are inherently oppressive or not#since the swimwear is not traditional#and my knowledge is mostly related to historical dress so i don't feel i know enough of the muslim swimwear to properly comment on it#based on my knowledge of historical western swimwear my initial reaction would be to doubt that modest muslim swimwear is actually dangerou#but again i could be wrong since i don't really know that much about it
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Shopping in KL
When you travel, what activities do you enjoy? Perhaps visiting famous landmarks, exploring iconic places, or indulging in some shopping? Traveling to a new country often opens up a world of new experiences, whether it’s shopping or simply seeing things that are different from what you are familiar to. We share the same curiosity. We love to explore local markets and shopping districts to see how…

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#central market kl#central market malaysia kuala lumpur#central market pasar seni kl#chinatown cendol#chinatown petaling street#coconut milk#durian#hijab#indoor shopping#jalan masjid india kuala lumpur#jalan petaling market#kasturi walk#kl sentral market#muslim dress#outdoor market#petaling street#petaling street chinatown#petaling street kuala lumpur#regalia residence kuala lumpur#shopping market
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crossdressing haitham x bi disaster cyno, inspired by this post! I also put in some not-so-sneaky references ehe
ID: a drawing of Cyno and Alhaitham from Genshin Impact. Cyno is the only one fully colored; he is blushing and wide eyed, with an exclamation mark and three hearts in pink, purple, and blue around him. Alhaitham is not fully colored save for his eyes, and there are seven of him in various clothes. Unless specified otherwise, he keeps his soundproof earpieces. On the bottom left corner, he is in a dress, with flowers in his hair. Above that, he is wearing a hijab with a brooch, and he is tapping his chin, looking aside. On the top left, he is wearing a sweater, a long skirt, hair clips, and rectangular glasses; he's smiling and has stacks of books in his arms. On the top middle, he has much longer hair and does not have his earpieces, and he is winking; there is text pointing at him saying "wig #1". Below that is him wearing clothing inspired by female Eremites, holding the handle of a hidden weapon. His hair is slicked back. On the top right, he is in a shoulder-less dress and thigh-high garters; he is sitting with one leg over the other, holding a cup of wine. Below that, he is holding a mug with steam coming out of it, smiling and looking up; his earpieces are off, his hair is shoulder-length, and the text pointing at him says "wig #2". On the bottom right, he has on a looser hijab, a long-sleeved long dress, and glasses. He has his hand up, adjusting his hijab. End ID.
#genshin impact#alhaitham#cyno#cytham#haino#cyhaino#my art#cynoal#alhaitham x cyno#cyno x alhaitham#genshin#genshin fanart#long post#image description#that's right. not one but TWO hijabi hthm. the self indulgence is through the roof#(can't wait for someone on hylb to say it's wrong to draw queer muslims as if we don't exist or smth)#anyway. haitham is a fun dress up doll. i should do this again (crossdressing or not)
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Indigenous textiles from the Maguindao tribe, Philippines.
#Maguindanao#Bangsamoro#Philippines#Filipinas#Filipino#Muslim#Pacific islander#Textile#Folk fashion#Fashion#Traditional dress
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Lets have some drinks :P
reblog if you like 😊
#beauty#beauttiful girls#myself#softcore#daddy's good girl#selfie girl#slim and sexy#brunnete#slim model#mini dress#hijabi#hijab#muslim
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can people be normal about Muslims for two seconds oh my God
tell me why obvious and casual stereotyping is unacceptable until it comes to us
#how Muslim men are demonised#how weird people are about how we (Muslim girls and women) dress#how Muslim countries are used to joke about oppression of the queer (you do realise that there are queer people who LIVE and suffer there)#how people view sacrificing animals at Eid as “cruel” (if you eat meat at all then you literally can't say anything)#how people think forced marriages are a thing in the RELIGION despite the RELIGION explicitly FORBIDDING IT#i could go on#ace's rants :(
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Some more designs from my “Muslim Khimar Dress Up” on meiker.
[ID: Six drawings of people in different khimar headscarves. Some also wear niqab. Some are missing their left or right arm. The faces are left intentionally blank. First. A woman with light skin wears a sparkly pink khimar, pink niqab, and pink-blue dress. She’s a left arm amputee. Second. A Black woman with medium dark skin wears an orange khimar and dress. Third. She has medium skin and wears a dark green mini-khimar, and a pastel green dress with white and pink flower pattern. She wears a rounded niqab in the same pattern. Fourth. A woman with medium skin wears a dusty pink diamond shaped khimar and matching dress with balloon sleeves. She is missing her right arm. Fifth. A woman with dark skin wears a black khimar, niqab, dress, and gloves. Sixth. A person with light skin wears a blue khimar, and a brown dress with red and blue flower pattern, and also a matching rounded niqab. Watermark in all images reads “Ameera meiker.” /end ID]
#muslim fashion#described#hijabi#niqabi#art#meiker#khimar#hijab#dress up game#disability#picrew#artists on tumblr#image description#mine
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#pretty#ebony#blackgirlmagic#melanin#melanin poppin#african beauty#black queen#black fashion#chocolate#brown skin#muslim fashion#modest#pretty face#black is beautiful#beautiful skin#black woman#womens fashion#fashion dress#beautiful women#black tumblr#muslimah#modesty
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📍Köln, Germany
#mosque#köln#germany#muslim#modestfashion#modestelegance#modest dress#modestclothing#blue moodboard#blue#beige aesthetic#beige tones#beige moodboard#astethic#astetic#chill vibes#vibes#good vibes#best friends#family#imane khelif#islam#islamic#islamdaily#welcome to islam#islampost#islamiyet#islamislove#müslüman#mumin
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i will never understand how muslim men are so deeply miserable that everytime they see any hijabi girl having their own unique clothing style something just snaps in their heads and they feel the need to create new rules that simply do not exist in islam just to shame those girls
#and i know i said muslim men but other hijabis also do this and its so fucking disappointing like who the fuck do you think you are????#saw a goth hijabi who was dressing VERY “modestly” and the comments were all telling her that shes going to hell#they all spout this bullshit about how allah is the only one who can judge and yet they tell these poor girls that theyre going to hell???#finn.txt
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