Chaubandi Cholo

Chaubandi Cholo is a traditional woman's blouse of Nepali culture.[1] The blouse is typically wrapped and can have an open or closed neck. It is often worn with a sārī-like wrapped skirt.[2][3] A chaubandi cholo is often cotton in a red or white geometric print, however different color and use can distinguish different Nepali cultures.[4]

Wearing the chaubandi cholo as traditional wear has been encouraged by certain nationalist groups in Nepal and West Bengal.[5]

References

  1. "Collection Online". Brithsh Museum. Retrieved 13 November 2016.
  2. "Caste Language and Dress". APH Publishing Corporation. Retrieved 13 November 2016.
  3. Besky, Sarah (2013), The Darjeeling Distinction: Labor and Justice on Fair-Trade Tea Plantations in India, Univ of California Press, p. 152, ISBN 9780520957602, retrieved 21 Dec 2016, If one were to visit Chowrasta on a day in October between 2007 and 2009, one might mistake the scene for something out of a Darjeeling GI film: throngs of Nepalis, most of them tea plantation workers, most of them women, all dressed in "traditional" Nepali clothing[.] *** For Darjeeling Gorkhas, this meant chaubandi cholo for women and daurā sural for men. A chaubandi cholo is wrapped and tied top top with a sārī-like wrapped skirt bottom, usually madeout of cotton in a red and white geometric print.
  4. "The Finest 100 of Nepal". ECS Nepal. Lalitpur, Nepal: ECS Media. 26 Jul 2010. Retrieved 21 Dec 2016. A Thakali woman may dress in a red chaubandi cholo and has a distinct style of wearing the saree by wrapping a black shawl over it, with a dark green patuka around her waist.
  5. "Faces blackened after dress code defiance". The Telegraph. Calcutta. 14 Oct 2016. Retrieved 21 Dec 2016. For women, the traditional attire is chaubandi cholo
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