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What Indus Valley men and women used to wear for decoration?

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Women used to wear necklace, strings of beads and bangles for decoration. They were so used to wear "Lahanga" (long skirt). Men used to wear Shawl.

The earliest evidence for normal weave textiles at Harappa is found  in this impression on a Ravi Phase bead from Harappa, dating to around  3300 BC and discovered between 1995 and 1998.

Textiles are rarely preserved and Harappan figurines are usually  unclothed, so there is not much evidence of Harappan clothing.  Small  fragments of cloth preserved in the corrosion products of metal objects  show that the Harappans wove a range of grades of cotton cloth.  Flax  was grown and may have been used for fibres (alternatively it was grown  for its oilseed). Native Indian species of silkworm may have been  utilised for silk (inferior to Chinese silk), as they were a little  later in South Asia. It is not known whether the Harappans raised woolly  sheep, but their trade with Mesopotamia probably brought them abundant  supplies of Mesopotamian woolen textiles.  The Harappans also probably  continued the earlier tradition of making clothing from leather. Dyeing  facilities indicate that cotton cloth was probably dyed a range of  colours, although there is only one surviving fragment of coloured  cloth, dyed red with madder; it is likely that indigo and turmeric were  also used as dyes.

The limited depictions of clothing show that men wore a cloth around  the waist, resembling a modern dhoti and like it, often passed between  the legs and tucked up behind. The so-called "Priest-king" and other  stone figures also wore a long robe over the left shoulder, leaving bare  the right shoulder and chest. Some male figurines are shown wearing a  turban. Woman's clothing seems to have been a knee-length skirt.  Figurines and finds in graves show that Harappans of both sexes wore  jewellery: hair fillets, bead necklaces and bangles for men; bangles,  earrings, rings, anklets, belts made of strings of beads, pendants,  chokers and numerous necklaces for women, as well as elaborate  hairstyles and headdresses.

The only evidence we have is from iconography and figurines as far as  dress styles are concerned, and it is not sure that these even represent  what was worn by everyday people. Quite possibly dress may have been  based on lengths of cloth that were folded and draped in different ways.  Such cloth could have been made of linen, cotton, or wool/animal hair.  Skins also may have been used for cold weather and to make items like  belts, quivers, etc. Reeds/straw may have been woven for foot wear,  although how often foot wear may have been used is not known.  Evidence  comes not so much from preserved textiles but from pseudomorphs  preserved because of proximity to copper and from impressions made into  clay. An early form of silk was used to string tiny beads and wound  copper necklaces.
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