Head cover , headband , or headdress is the name given to each element of the wear that is worn on the person's head.
Headgear serves many purposes:
- protection (against impact, cold, heat, rain and other rainfall, glare, sunburn, sunburn, dust, contaminants, etc.)
- to keep hair neat or tidy
- decorations or fashions
- religious purpose
- medical purpose
- courtesy; social convention
- differences; office badge
- sports uniform
Video Headgear
Overview of headgear type
Hat
Hats, such as those worn by women and girls, are hats that are worn outdoors secured by tying under the chin, and often those with some sort of peak or visor. Some hat styles have a peak so large that it effectively prevents women from looking to the right or left without turning their heads. Hats worn by men and boys are generally distinguished from caps gently and not full - these uses are now rare (they would normally be called hats today, except in Scotland where "bunnets" are common in civilian life and in Regiments Kingdom of Scotland).
Caps
Hats are generally soft and often do not have edges or just tops (such as baseball caps). For centuries women wear headdresses called hats. For example, in the 18th and 19th century hats were a kind of headdress made of thin cloth like muslin; it is worn indoors or under a hat by a married woman, or an unmarried woman who is "on the shelf" (eg mob-cap). Ochipok is part of the traditional costume of Ukraine.
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Some headgear, such as crown, coronet, and tiara, have evolved into jewelry. This headgear is used as a symbol of nobility or royal status. Kokoshnik is part of traditional Russian clothing, often worn by nobles.
Fillet
The fillet or circle is a round band worn around the head and above the hair. This complicated and expensive version of it eventually evolved into a crown, but the fillet can be made of woven fabrics of fabric, leather, beads or metal. Fillet is unisex, and especially prevalent in archaic to renaissance dress.
Haircut
Hairnets are used to prevent hair out of food contamination or work areas. The goose is a net or cloth bag that is pinned or fastened on the back of a woman's head as it holds the hair. Scarves are used to protect the hair that is styled or keep it neat. Bathing caps and swim caps prevent hair from becoming wet or entangled during activity.
Hat
Hats often have full edges around the rim, and can be placed on the head, or secured with a hat-pin (which is pushed through the hat and hair). Depending on the type of hat, they may be worn by men, by women or by both sexes.
Helm
Helmets are designed to protect the head, and sometimes the neck, from injury. They are usually stiff, and offer protection from punches. Helmets are commonly used in combat, on construction sites and in many contact sports (most commonly associated with American football). In most of the United States they are required by law for anyone who operates various vehicles including motorcycles, and sometimes extends to bikes and skateboards.
Veil
The modern hood is a soft head covering which is an integral part of larger garments, such as a coat, shirt or cloak.
Historically, the hood was similar to a modern hood, or a separate form of headgear. In medieval Europe caps with short capes, called chaperons in French, were very common, and later developed into elaborate and customizable hats. The veil of women varies from fitting and soft headgear to rigid and rigid hoods (eg gable roofs, hennins or French veils) or very large coverings made of materials on top of the frames used by fashionable women dressed in wigs or towering hairstyles high to protect it from elements (eg, calash).
Mask
The mask is worn in part or all of the face, often to disguise the wearer, but sometimes to protect the face. Masks are often used for fun to disguise the wearer at a costume party, a gold ball, during Halloween or any other festival, or as part of an artistic performance. They can also be imposed by criminals to prevent recognition or as camouflage when they commit a crime. Masks that physically protect the wearer vary in design, from guard bars across the face in the case of ice hockey goalkeepers, to facial enclosures that purify or control the air supply of the wearer, as in a gas mask.
Orthodontic head cover
Orthodontic head cover is used to control the growth of maxillary and mandibular bone during orthodontic treatment. The most commonly used head cover treatment is to correct anteroposterior mismatch. The head cover is attached to the braces through a metal hook or facebow. The rope or headgear pinned the headgear to the back of the head or neck. In some situations, both are used.
The elastic band is used to apply pressure to the bow or hook which is then transferred to the patient's teeth and jaw. The goal is to slow or stop the upper jaw from growing, thereby preventing or correcting the overjet. The other headgear shape treats overturned overjets, where the maxilla is not enough forwards. This is similar to a face mask, also attached to the braces, and encourages the growth of the upper jaw.
Turbans
Turban is a head covering, mostly for men, made of a cloth wrapped around the head in various styles. Turban is the best known word in English for a large category of headgear and a common head wrap that is traditionally worn in many parts of the world. Around the world Sikhs wear turbans as headscarves and Muslims also wear the same cover
Turban for women is a popular choice during chemotherapy treatment as an alternative to wigs, hats, veils, and headbands. Sikh women also wear turban as a religious practice. Turban for women made with comfortable and functional natural cloth. Breast Cancer Treatment Booklet, Breast Cancer, and Hair Loss show, "You may want to wear a soft cap or turban on the bed to collect loose hair"
Veil and head coil
Jilbab is a thin sheet of cloth that covers the whole or part of the face. For centuries women covered their hair, neck, ears, chin, and parts of their faces with cloth. Each culture creates a complex headgear for women and men using scarves, scarves, handkerchiefs or hijabs. VERY complicated hijab practices are common in Islam, Africa and Eastern Europe. Women who do not cover their heads regularly, often wear veils in wedding ceremonies and traditional funeral ceremonies.
Wig
Wigs are headpieces made of natural or synthetic hair that may be worn to disguise bald or thin hair, or as part of a costume. Wigs may be worn by a man to cover partial baldness. In most Commonwealth countries, special wigs are also worn by certain lawyers, judges, and parliamentary officials as office symbols.
Maps Headgear
Destination
Protection or defense
There are also various kinds of helmets. There are also hats used for protection from the cold. This includes many types of fur hats, and also the Canadian tuque.
Mode
Headgear is also a fashion item. The official black silk hat was once a very important part of the suit, and women's hats, over the years, reached a large number of shapes ranging from spices to nothing more than a few pieces of fabric and decorations piled on top of the head. Some hats, like the Deep Blue Sea, are creation creations that are made more as works of art than as fashionable practical items, and may be worth thousands or millions of dollars. Recently, hats as formal clothing articles have been left out of fashion, although some types of hats in addition to baseball caps may be included in the youth subculture mode.
The meaning of religion
Some headgear worn for religious practice.
In Judaism, men cover their heads in honor of God. Close the head of Judaism for men including a small cloth hat called kippah or yarmulke . Some men wear it all the time, others in the synagogue. In Orthodox Judaism and Hasid, kippah may also be covered by hats such as fedoras or shtreimels. Traditional married Jewish women cover their hair in various ways, such as with hijab, called tichels, snoods, or wigs, called sheitels in accordance with the principles and halacha tzniut.
Similar to yarmulke is the zucchetto worn by Roman Catholic priests. Other forms of apostolic head coverings include partners, biretta, carded cardiac caps, and papal tiara. Orthodox priests and monasteries often wear skuafia, kamilavkion, or klobuk. See also fez (clothing). The term red hat , when used in the Roman Catholic Church, refers to the appointment of the Cardinal, senior Prince of the Church, who is a member of the electoral institution choose whales. At the designated to the cardinal, he is said to have received a red hat , or a cardinal biretta. Christian women have traditionally been required to wear the veil while in the Church, but this practice has declined since the 1900s and is only followed by women of certain denominations and cultures.
Sikh men are required to wear a turban. Some Sikh women also wear a turban but that's not a requirement for Sikh women. Turban is also worn by Muslims, especially among Shiite Muslims, who consider wearing turban as the Sunnah Mu'akkadah (traditionally confirmed).
In Islam, Hijab, or hijab, worn by women because it is considered simple. Muslim men also wear a skull called "kufi" or taqiyah (hat). Until recently, men in most Muslim societies were rarely seen without headdresses. The doppa from Caucasus is worn by Kazan Tatar, Uzbeks and Uyghurs. Conservative Muslims in Indonesia and Malaysia, especially in rural areas, are often seen wearing thin skullcaps.
The black satin head cap called or otherwise known as fenta âââ ⬠or hat is a box-shaped skullcap, worn by Zoroastrians. This is considered by some in the Zoroastrian religion to be of great spiritual importance. In earlier times, the red-and-white striped kipahs were characteristic of the Zoroastrian.
Buddhist priests in China wear bao-tzu (better known as mao-tzu , "Mandarin mÃÆ' ozi ), the most similar classical skull with the Jewish tradition.In Japan, the hat is deeper in the form of a medicine box and is called boshi (??).Although not an ecclesiastical significance, the Buddha's headgear shows something about the priest's position in the community.
Some people choose to wear paste filters on identity photographs as "pastafarians", when headgear in photo identities are only allowed on religious grounds.
Status or work symbol
Head covers such as crowns and tiaras are used as recognition of nobility status, especially among nobles. Wigs are traditionally worn by judges and lawyers from Commonwealth countries. Furry headpieces, such as war hats from lowland Indian culture, are used by various tribes of North America and South America.
Etiquette
In Western culture derived from the Christian tradition, removing a person's head cover is a sign of respect, making himself more open, humble or vulnerable, such as bending or kneeling. It's as if to say, "I admit that you are stronger than me, I make myself vulnerable to show that I am not threatening you and respecting you." Hat man removed in the Church, and not remove it usually crimped. Women, however, should wear hats to cover their heads in some churches according to 1 Corinthians 11: 5.
In the Jewish tradition, the opposite idea equally shows respect for God's superior authority. Wearing kippah or yarmulke means the wearer acknowledges the vast power, wisdom, and authority that separates God from man. This is a sign of humility to wear yarmulke. There is a general phrase that explains this, saying that "there is always something above you" if you wear yarmulke, helping you remember that you are human and God is unlimited. The Talmud quote speaks of a righteous man who "does not walk (six feet) with his head open, (the spirit of God) is always above him". Jews can also wear fur hats or black hats full.
In Islamic ethics, wearing a head covering is permissible when pronouncing prayer in a mosque, see taqiyah (cap) for further information.
In the military, there are special rules about when and where to wear hats. Hats are usually worn only outdoors, at sea or on land; However, personnel carrying firearms usually also wear their hats in the room. Removing one's hat is also a form of respect. Many schools also have this rule because of the fact that many younger men tend to wear baseball caps and these relate to gangs depending on the side where the hat is worn.
As a guide, a man must take off his hat to show respect to the dead, when a national anthem is played or in front of a nobleman, in a church or courtroom, and during other occasions, when meeting someone, and indoors while in the presence of a woman although there is no real relationship with the undiscovered head and the place and situation). A woman can keep wearing her hat, unless she's wearing what is considered a unisex hat, like a baseball cap, when she has to take off her hat as well. Women usually do not take off their caps in this situation because they may be carefully pinned to their hair but take off their hats only in their own homes.
Finally, the cap can be raised (briefly removed and replaced, with both hands), or "tipped" (touched or tilted forward) as a speech.
Beginning
There are two types of hats: with edges and without. Needs and fashion are the reasons people wear hats. The first artificial hat is nothing more than a round piece of leather. The hole-sized circle of a person's head is perforated in the skin, and a piece of string is then woven through the holes and pulled tightly to hold the cap firmly on the head. Bando separates the crown from the periphery.
The wide floppy edges are tied with ribbons, to keep them out of one's eyes. Several times when the tape came loose, they would see that the edges remained curved by themselves. This causes the curved edge of the hand.
Brim tied with ribbons to keep them from fraying after being cut with a knife. Although advances in material have eliminated the need to tie the edges, or pinch them, the habit persists. We have to keep our edges curled up because hatters who have not known how to tense for a long time.
When people go to battle, they usually use fur from their loved ones. Since most men are not left-handed, they lead when the sword fights with the right side. At first they will attach the fur on adjustable adjustment bands. Unless they want to fight the blind, the live duelers move the feathers and knots, to the left side of the hat, where it stays to this day. As time passes, they will wrap the ribbon around the crown to hold the feathers and hide the knot of the string.
When the skin becomes velvet, it needs protection to keep a soft cloth from falling in people's hair, from where it comes from. Although the modern cap is stiff enough not to collapse, the habit remains. The individual size eliminates the need for a tie strap, but the bow remains at the back of the hat, serving as a warning to pass through hatters. What has evolved from needs then becomes fashionable.
Hats like cowboy hats are designed from feathers to the top, to provide lightweight all weather shields from West American climatic conditions. Hats like baseball caps are designed to provide shade.
See also
- List of hats and headgear
- List of hat styles
- Chapeaugraphy - an action in which the rib rings are formed to resemble many types of hats
References
External links
- Head covering Christian cover for Today
- Close Fashion Plate Head from Metropolitan Museum Art Museum
Source of the article : Wikipedia