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Start Over You searched for: Object class Clothing Remove constraint Object class: Clothing Collector George M. Foster Remove constraint Collector: George M. Foster Function 2.0 Use not specified (Secular Dress and Accoutrements, and Adornment) Remove constraint Function: 2.0 Use not specified (Secular Dress and Accoutrements, and Adornment)

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Hearst Museum object titled Garment: quechquemitl, accession number 3-32036, described as Woven cloth, white with red embroidery; garment: poncho-like quechquemitl
Hearst Museum object titled Huipil, accession number 3-32040, described as huipil or shirt, woven textile, white with pattern.
Hearst Museum object titled Skirt, accession number 3-32053, described as black wool skirt with red tirm, worn with 3-32052 hat
Hearst Museum object titled Skirt, accession number 3-4831, described as Red, white, black and blue for semi-dress wear refajo skirt made by an Aztec woman.  "Refajo" skirt woven by a Mexicana (Aztec) woman on a girdle-back loom, in the Mexicano-speaking town Mecayapan.  This is an average specimen of a quality usually worn for everyday work around the home.  For field work an older, less well made garment would be substituted.  The Refajo is the most typical loom work of all of the Indians, Aztec and Popoluca alike, of the Coatzacoalcos area of Southern Veracruz.