| In the Ukrainian town of
Pereyaslav-Khmel’nytsky there is a museum of Ukrainian traditional, national dress. It
is housed in an eighteenth-century building and has in its collection about 1500 shirts,
blouses and other embroidered items, about 200 woman’s adornments, over 200 belts,
aprons, head-dresses and other pieces of traditional Ukrainian costume plus a lot more.
The layman comes to the museum to gaze at the exhibits in wonder and admiration, and the
historian comes to study the changing styles, types of dress, and through them better
understand Ukrainian culture and everyday life of the past. |
NOSTALGIA
FOR THINGS TRADITIONAL
In the whirl of changes Ukraine finds
itself in now, one feels a sort of nostalgia for things that seem to have gone forever
never to come back, and yet it turns out they linger on in dress, customs, songs and
dancers. There are still a lot of people living who remember the way the traditional
religious holidays and festivals were celebrated in the rural Ukraine. Some of these
people even would say: «Oh, I’ve seen the real celebrations of Christmas, the real
wedding reception» and so on, meaning that these occasions were celebrated differently
from the way they are celebrated now.
«Real» in this sense is tantamount to traditional, time-honoured. One of the integral
parts of «traditional» life is dress, woman’s dress in particular. A great care was
taken to have every item of the dress in full correspondence with the requirements of
custom and tradition. The occasion and the season determined what kind of dress was to be
worn. The wedding dress epitomised the beauty and expectation of the youth; it was
resplendent with decorations and adorned lavishly with embroidery. In winter, when the
quiet of Christmas Eve was gaily broken by Ukrainian merry kolyadka’s (sort of Christmas
carols), young women and girls, who were singing them, were supposed to be wearing white
sheepskin coats and multicoloured bright headkerchiefs.
One can’t help feeling nostalgic but one dons her grandmother’s dress and as if in a
time machine one is taken back to the time which seems to be so distant and yet poignantly
recent. This dress from the grandma’s trunk helps one find the link between now and
then. Cinema and theatre occasionally remind us —not so frequently though as one wishes
they would — of the splendour of the Ukrainian traditional national costume. |
DRESS
REFLECTS CLIMATE AND MENTALITY
National dress of any nation, of a big one
in particular, the one with a history and culture that span more than a thousand years,
reflects the geographical situation of the country this nation occupies, the climate,
mentality, levels of economic and social development and a lot more. The Ukrainian
national costume is not an exception in this respect. An historian of costume remarked
that the traditional woman’s dress alone — in all of its varieties of course — would
be sufficient to give one a comprehensive picture of historical and cultural features of
life in the Ukrainian village of the past.
NATIONAL DRESS OF
CLASSICAL TYPE
If one can apply the word «classic» to
the national dress one can say that the Ukrainian Midland in the basin of the Dnipro river
is the area where the Ukrainian national dress acquired features which can be regarded as
«classical», that is very typical of Ukrainian traditional costume in general. |
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It is there that the ancient Rus-Ukraine dress had gradually
become specifically Ukrainian as it is known now. The national dress throughout Ukraine
shows the same «classical» features, though each distinguishable geographical and
cultural part of Ukraine has some differences in dress, particularly in embroidery
patterns. In some cases slight variations can be observed even in the dress worn by people
living in the neighbouring villages.
SHIRT — AN ANCIENT
SLAVIC GARMENT
In addition to being just an
article of clothing the shirt (or, probably, more properly «blouse» if applied to a
woman’s garment) had a special, sometimes symbolical meaning for those who wore it. It
was not too long ago that some village girls who wanted to put an amorous spell on a lad
they fancied, would wear a «magic» shirt when they went through an «enchanting
ceremony», and this shirt had to be the one they had started making on the Ivan
Kupala’s night — an ancient heathen holiday celebrated in summer which in Christian
times was incorporated into the calendar of Christian holidays.
The woman’s shirt — or a blouse, if you want — worn in the area of Poltava was a
long one, with embroidered sleeves; the one from the Chernihiv land was the longest among
others. The shirt to be worn on weekdays differed, naturally, from the one that was worn
on Sunday. Every woman was supposed to know how to make a shirt, and teenage girls at the
age of about 12 were taught how to do the needlework and whatever else that was required
for being a good housewife. A woman of some means had about 15-20 shirts, and a bride from
a well-to-do family was expected to have no fewer than 50-60 shirts in her dowry. The
number of shirts, their quality, type of embroidery were good indicators of what the girl
was as a potential housewife.
NEEDLEWORK
The thread used in adorning
shirts with needlework was dyed with natural dyes and the actual technique of needlework
varied from place to place, and from century to century. The stitches used also varied —
from very intricate to rather simplified. In the early twentieth century cross-stitch
gained predominance over other types of stitches. Even if the colour scheme was limited to
two contrasting colours, the patterns themselves in combination with the colours never
failed to produce a powerful visual effect.
PATTERNS OF
ADORNMENT
Girls and women, bent over
their needlework during the long winter nights in the snow-bound houses, lit inside only
by a small oil-lamp or a candle, adorned their shirts with all kinds of embroidery
patterns: stylized floral, animal and purely ornamental designs. By far the most popular
one was that of a broken tree which happens to be one of the modifications of the
universal symbol the tree of life, a symbol found virtually all around the world in art
and on household items. Solar symbols and purely geometrical patterns are also widely used
in embroidery. |
SKIRTS,
BELTS, VESTS, HEADKERCHIEFS
Each article of clothing had a
special name and as there were quite a few of these articles in woman’s costume it would
be unreasonable to list all of them here. A couple will suffice. Plakhta and zapaska were
two kinds of skirts; the usually chequered plakhta was the more cheerful looking of the
two and consequently was worn on festive occasions, and zapaska of subdued colours, made
of durable cloth, was an everyday garment.
Belts had to keep the skirts in place but besides this purely technical function they had
a role to play in the general arrangement of the dress. Some of the belts were long strips
of fabric, wound several times around the waist (thus they served also as a support for
the spine and protection against injury). Belts, usually red in colour, were, like the
rest of the costume, adorned with floral and geometrical embroidered patterns.
All kinds of vests were of varying length, modestly or lavishly adorned with needlework
and other decorations; elder women, naturally, preferred quieter ones in tone and
decoration, and young women and girls chose to wear the brighter ones and more richly
adorned.
In summer girls and unmarried women did not wear hats or bonnets and walked about
bare-headed, with their hair usually braided. The hair was taken good care of, as it was a
matter of pride for every girl to display long braids, adorned with bright ribbons or
wreaths made of dry or freshly-picked flowers. Married women did not braid their hair and
never displayed it in public. They tucked their hair under an ochipok, a sort of
close-fitting scull-cap made of silk, brocade or chintz. It was considered indecent for a
married woman to be seen bare-headed. The ochipok was to be worn all life long with the
hair hidden under it, and there was hardly a greater shame for a woman to have her ochipok
pulled off her hair by someone in public (probably it had something to do with the belief
in magic qualities of hair).
Headkerhiefs and shawls came to be used widely only at the end of the nineteenth century,
and the occasion and means available determined what kind of headkerchief or shawl was to
be worn.
EARRINGS, NECKLACES,
RINGS
It’s hard to imagine a woman
indifferent to earrings, necklaces, rings and other decorations and to be sure Ukrainian
women wore all kinds of ornaments. Coral necklace was an especially highly prized item but
they cost a lot and only relatively few could afford them. As recently as about 70-80
years ago for a price of a coral necklace one could buy a cow. The poorer had to be
content with glass beads, the richer sported necklaces made of gold and silver coins.
The costume would not be complete without a good pair of boots which were red, black,
yellow and green in colour and worn mostly to church or on some special occasions as the
footwear was expensive. Boots were put on bare feet; girls could have high heels and
married women had to do with low heels. As soon as the weather was warm enough, heavy
winter boots were stowed away and the female folk walked about mostly barefoot.
Winter coats for the most part were made from sheepskin and were of various lengths and
degrees of adornment. Some of the ornamental patterns definitely had symbolic meaning.
A dress can be not only beautiful — it can tell an exciting story, if you know what to
ask. |