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MADE IN AFRICA BRAND

HISTORY OF AFRICAN CLOTHING

Posted by Walter Gido on

HISTORY OF AFRICAN CLOTHING
Africa is a big continent, so people had very different styles of clothing in different parts of Africa. African clothing commonly refers to the traditional clothing worn by the people of Africa. People in Africa seem to have started wearing clothing around 180,000 years ago, soon after homo sapiens evolved – at least, that’s about the time that the first body lice got started, and lice need clothing to live in.
African people probably started to wear clothes because of an Ice Age about that time: it got too cold in many parts of Africa to be comfortable naked.
People first made clothing out of animal skins – leather and fur shawls and loincloths. They made the first jewelry out of seashells, ostrich egg shells, and feathers.
After many thousands of years, people began to make lighter, less sweaty kinds of clothes. Probably the first kind of cloth made in Africa was pounded bark fibers.
You peel the bark off trees and pound it with a rock until the fibers get soft and the hard part breaks off. This makes small pieces of bark cloth which can be pounded or sewn together.
In Uganda in Central Africa, for instance, people used the bark of fig trees. This kind of bark fabric may be related to the development of Kemetian papyrus.
African people also pounded cloth from the raffia palm. The Greek historian Herodotus describes people who wore raffia cloth in the story of the Persian explorer Sataspes.
By about 5000 BC – still in the Stone Age – people in Kemet, North Africa, and East Africa were starting to spin and weave their clothing out of a plant called flax. We call that kind of cloth linen.
Linen was harder to make, and took longer, but it was more flexible and more beautiful. By 3000 BC, Kemetian workshops made super-fine linen to sell to people in other places.
People in Kemet were also producing some cotton cloth by around 2500 BC. But they never grew very much cotton. Kemet really specialized in linen.
People dyed this bark cloth to make all kinds of patterns. The most important dye was indigo, which is the dye we use today to make blue jeans blue. There were no indigo plants in Africa. Africans bought indigo dye from Indian traders.

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