Page:Costume, fanciful, historical, and theatrical (1906).djvu/169

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XI
OF SOME FOREIGN PEASANTS
127

that when she is going to be married she thinks nothing of paying seven or eight hundred francs for a necklace.


A GREEK PEASANT IN MEDIÆVAL DRESS.

Not only are the Croatian women noted for their unusual beauty of face and form, they are equally famous for their industry, and the national costume is a marvel of needlework. The example illustrated on page 124 shows embroidery playing its part on the sleeves, the full skirt, and the bodice. The chemisette is of white lawn, and jewels are around the neck, and flowers wreathe the head over a lawn cap which conceals the hair.

The sketch of the Croatian man on page 125 shows him in a hat of black felt, a coat of white bordered with blue, and a cape lined with red, edged with a pattern formed by an application of red cloth.

A more elaborate edition of this dress permits a gold fringe on the low crown of the hat, and a red fringe on a deep leather pouch which is held on the left hip by a leather strap.

Departing from the classical severity of palla and peplum, the dress of modern Greece has