mexican women's dresses Mexican Women's Tehuana Dress Cadenilla Stitch True Vintage Frida Kahl
SKU: 27011771036
mexican women's dresses

mexican women's dresses Mexican Women's Tehuana Dress Cadenilla Stitch True Vintage Frida Kahl

Sale price$22.28 Regular price$24.75
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Size: 4

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Description

mexican women's dresses Mexican Women's Tehuana Dress Cadenilla Stitch True Vintage Frida KahlDetails Care More Information Blouse Neck: 11 inches. Width at shoulder: 24. 5 inches. Width at bust: 23 inches. Length: 21 inches. Weight: 290 grams. Made in: Oaxaca, Mexico. Dress Length: 28 inches. Waist: 19 inches. Width at bottom of dress: 64 inches. Weight: 1. 052 grams. Made in: Oaxaca, Mexico. Hand wash and Hang dry. Huipil from the Nahuatl word is the most common traditional garment worn by indigenous women from central Mexico to central

  • Blouse

    1. Neck: 11 inches.
    2. Width at shoulder: 24.5 inches.
    3. Width at bust: 23 inches.
    4. Length: 21 inches.
    5. Weight: 290 grams.
    6. Made in: Oaxaca, Mexico.

    Dress

    1. Length: 28 inches.
    2. Waist: 19 inches.
    3. Width at bottom of dress: 64 inches.
    4. Weight: 1.052 grams.
    5. Made in: Oaxaca, Mexico.
    1. Hand wash and Hang dry.
    1. Huipil from the Nahuatl word is the most common traditional garment worn by indigenous women from central Mexico to central America. It is a loose-fitting tunic, generally made from two or three pieces of fabric which are then joined together with stitching with an opening for the head and if the sides are sewn, opening for the arms. The length of the huipil can vary from a short blouse-like garment or long enough to reach the floor. They have different purposes as for weeding and even to dress the statues of saints.
    2. This Oaxaca Mexican Women's Dress Tehuana Referred to as "Traje" is Mexican from El Istmo in the state of Oaxaca.
    3. The Juchitan People use these Dresses that are Hand Embroidered on a Singer Pedal Machine in front and back in art silk/articela on a lovely velvet cloth. Intact with original cotton lining.
    4. Tehuana and Juchitan are famous for the beloved Frida Kahlo, who was known to dress in these blouses on a regular basis.
    5. Totally wearable or you can use it for any project like pillows, wall hanging, table-runner etc.
    6. Very good condition. "This Dress is unsewn".
    7. The era is 1980's.
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SKU: 27011771036

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E in Miami
Bozeman, US
★★★★★ 5
Five Stars
Format: Paperback
Came in excellent condition; my son loves these.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 27, 2017
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Mike E. Walsh Jr.
Houston, US
★★★★★ 5
Five Stars
Format: Paperback
AWESOME COMIC book, THANKYOU
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Reviewed in the United States on March 12, 2018
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Donna Menchinger
Lowell, US
★★★★★ 5
Five Stars
Format: Paperback
Fun
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Reviewed in the United States on January 9, 2017
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MJ
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 2
Bent
Format: Paperback
When the book came the cover was crumpled and bent so it was really hard to read
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Reviewed in the United States on January 6, 2020
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N. Durham
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 5
Quite possibly the best Punisher stories ever told
Format: Hardcover
It's no secret that Garth Ennis' long run on the Punisher (particularly the MAX titles) has been nothing short of superb if not visionary, and this handsome hardcover collection, featuring three seperate one-shots, further proves that point. From First to Last begins with the Tyger, a story in which a young Frank Castle embarks on his first night of vengeance as the Punisher. As he has some mob men in his sights, he recollects to a summer in Brooklyn when he was a young man, and a shocking event that only further shaped Frank's inevitable path to becoming the Punisher. This story is good, but it's not anything really great, though John Severin's art is quite good. Thankfully, everything gets better from this point on. The Cell finds Frank turning himself in and convicted of his many murders and taken to the bowels of Riker's Island. However, Frank has a reason he's here, and it involves five men who all share a secret and a link to Frank that you'll never see coming. This story alone makes this collection worth picking up, and the art by Lewis Larosa (who also worked on the first Punisher MAX TPB, In the Beginning) is gritty, bloody, and brilliant. The third and final story is the spectacular Punisher: The End, featuring art by the legendary Richard Corben, which more than makes it worth checking out alone. As part of Marvel's "The End" line, this one-shot is just that, as an elderly Frank Castle finds himself as one of the last men on Earth after a nuclear holocaust has turned the world to ash and dust. Of course, there are still those that are guilty, and need to be punished. The last two stories alone are some of the best Punisher stories ever written, period. If you missed out on the one-shots when they were first released, now is your chance to read some of the best mainstream comic gold to come along in a long time, and this collection only furthers the notion that is discussed on the book's inside flap: Ennis was born to write the Punisher.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 30, 2006

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