Showing posts with label Clothes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Clothes. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Women Wedding Guests Prepare Their Clothes


Women do not generally travel in their takshitas.  If possible, they dress at the home of the bride just before the ceremony begins.
The female guests will arrive at your house with suitcases. While one bedroom is devoted to the bride and her 5 or 6 or 7 garment changes, the rest of your home, save the bathroom and kitchen, becomes one giant dressing room. The women get out of their travel clothes to get dressed and prepare for the wedding. Dresses, shoes, scarves, jewelry and make-up all come out of the bags. The women transform themselves and each other into sparkling showcases. Young and old, all of the women who may not even normally wear make-up, get dolled-up for the occasion.

A formal  dress worn to a Moroccan wedding is called a takshita (tak SHEET-ah). The older women are usually covered head-to-toe, but the younger women may wear newer styles of the takshita and appear bare-headed or with short sleeves or with dresses split to show skinny-legged pants underneath. But all of this is still modest by Western standards.  No one wears anything that is cut, as they say, up to here and down to there. But all of them come with strappy sandals and glittery dresses--sequined, shimmery, or embroidered with gold or silver threads.   And of course there is jewelry of gold, silver, pearl and all sorts of sparkling stones.

Once inside the wedding tent when the music starts, out of nowhere come the scarves that the women tie around their hips to better show off the moves of their dances.

The women and closely related male relatives gather inside the tent to sing, to dance, to eat, to view wedding gifts from the groom to the bride and to get photographed with the couple in any of the many bridal outfits worn during the ceremony by the bride and groom. Any non-related men have chairs and tables and are served outside.  Male waiters, photographers and entertainers don't count. Wedding logic. Go figure.

For families that want to have a sunnah wedding with male and female guests entertained separatedly, there are a couple of options. A high-end wedding may have two tents set up for males and females separately, but that typically doesn't happen because of the expense. More commonly, if the family maintains male-female separation, they may have a sunnah wedding in which all of the wedding proceedings take place in a female-only setting.  The men will have a banquet separately.

Sunday, October 16, 2011

What a Woman Wears to a Wedding

The women attending the weddings are almost as spectacularly dressed as the bride.

The formal dress for a woman to wear to a wedding in Morocco is called a takshita (tak SHEET ah).  They usually have a 2-color scheme and are worn with a wide belt.
Some young women favor a takshita with skinny leg pants underneath.
This taksita is a shimmering black with silver lace


Takshitas with brocade, velvet, and a brilliant blue
A takshita may also have a plain underdress with an elaborate lace and gold- or silver-trimmed, full-length jacket

Wedding Dresses for a Bride


The bride in white and gold.

A bride in Morocco will often have several dress changes during the ceremony. The wedding ladies help with all of the gown changes and make sure everything falls just so for poses and pictures throughout the night.
 One of the wedding ladies (in purple) keeps and eye on the train 
A heavily brocaded green wedding dress
The bride is heavily bejeweled in this print wedding dress
 An artfully arranged bridal veil



A traditional Berber wedding dress