rugged clothing - definizione. Che cos'è rugged clothing
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Cosa (chi) è rugged clothing - definizione

PSALM
The old rugged cross; Old Rugged Cross
  • Old Rugged Cross historical sign, Albion, Michigan

Persian clothing         
THE CLOTHING DEVELOPED BY PERSIANS FROM NEAR ACHAEMENID PERIOD
Iranian clothing
Traditional Persian clothing can be seen in Persian miniature paintings, employ both vivid and muted colors for clothing, although the colors of paint pigment often do not match the colors of dyes.
Yup'ik clothing         
  • Yup'ik dancer]] from [[Inu-Yupiaq]] dance group performing in a [[kuspuk]], dance headdress (''nasqurrun''), and mukluk
  • Driftwood on [[Arey Island]] on the [[Alaska North Slope]] of Inupiat lands
  • A group of Nunivak Cup'ig children playing on a fence at the reindeer roundup on Nunivak
  • Nunivak Cup’ig]] man with fancy hat (''nacarpig'ar'' men's dance hat; man's fancy cap with strips of fur hanging on shoulders) playing a very large drum (''cauyar'') in a 1927 photograph by [[Edward S Curtis]]
  • Two Nunivak Cup'ig children wearing circular caps (''uivqurraq'') and duck-skin parkas (probably ''aarraangiarat'') in 1928 photograph by [[Edward S Curtis]].<ref>Alaska Native Collections : [http://alaska.si.edu/media.asp?id=1035&object_id=82 Hat (E037904)]</ref>
  • Hooper Bay]] Askinarmiut boy poses wearing a circular cap (''uivqurraq'') and fur parka, in 1930 photograph by [[Edward S Curtis]].<ref>Alaska Native Collections : [http://alaska.si.edu/media.asp?id=1037&object_id=82 Hat (E037904)]</ref>
  • Nunivak Cup'ig child with [[snowshoe rabbit]] or [[tundra hare]] fur, or possibly a feathered bird skin parka, and [[wood knot]]-like beaded circular cap (''uivqurraq''), photograph by Edward Curtis, 1930
  • Yup'ik Eskimo children learning to sew (western-style) in a U.S. government school in Alaska, sometime between 1900-1930
  • [[Kuspuk]] worn by Eskimo woman and girl ice fishing
  • A modern fancy parka (''atkupiaq'') with trim at hem (''akurun''). Fur market in Fairbanks, between 1980 and 1983
  • [[Horned puffin]]s on a Nunivak Island sea cliff, August 2008. Horned puffin skins were counted and sold in "knots" or bundles of six. Thirty-four skins were necessary for a man's parka and 28 for a woman's.
  • Yup'ik semi-conical [[bentwood]] hunting [[visor]] (''elqiaq'') with [[walrus ivory]] and feather decoration. Exhibit in the Arvid Adolf Etholén collection, Museum of Cultures (''Kulttuurien museo'') of [[National Museum of Finland]], Helsinki, Finland.
  • waterproof fish-skin mitten (''arilluk'')
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  • The formation of the [[Eskimo Nebula]] is like an Eskimo parka hood ruff with a face.
  • Nunivak Cup'ig boy, photograph by Edward Curtis, 1928
  • A dance headdress (''nasqurrun''), 2009
  • Edna Wilder (1976), ''Secrets of Eskimo skin sewing''. Anchorage, Alaska: Alaska Northern Publishing Company, 1976. Edna Wilder was the first native instructor in the art of skin sewing class held at the University of Alaska.
  • Nunivak Cup’ig wooden snow goggles, Nunivak Island, Alaska, first half of the 20th century, [[Honolulu Museum of Art]]
  • Hooper Bay]] woman with hoodless parka in a 1928 photograph by [[Edward S Curtis]]
  • An ulu from [[Alaska]]
  • Nunivaarmiut (Nunivak Cup'ig) mother and child (''Joe Moses'') wearing hooded simple fur parkas (''atkuuk''), photograph by Edward Curtis, 1930
  • Yup'ik semi-conical [[bentwood]] hunting [[visor]] (''elqiaq'') with [[walrus ivory]] and feather decoration. [[Ethnological Museum of Berlin]].
TRADITIONAL CLOTHING WORN BY THE YUP'IK PEOPLE OF ALASKA
Yup'ik parka; Yupik clothing
Yup'ik clothing (Yup'ik aturaq sg aturak dual aturat pl, aklu, akluq, un’u ; also, piluguk in Unaliq-Pastuliq dialect, aklu, cangssagar, un’u in Nunivak dialect, Cup'ik clothing for the Chevak Cup'ik-speaking people of Chevak and Cup'ig clothing for the Nunivak Cup'ig-speaking people of Nunivak Island) refers to the traditional Eskimo-style clothing worn by the Yupik people of southwestern Alaska.
Rugged individualism         
PHRASE COINED BY HERBERT HOOVER
Rugged Individualism; Rugged individualist; Ruggedly individualist
Rugged individualism, derived from individualism, is a term that indicates that an individual is self-reliant and independent from outside, usually state or government, assistance. While the term is often associated with the notion of laissez-faire and associated adherents, it was actually coined by United States president Herbert Hoover.

Wikipedia

The Old Rugged Cross

"The Old Rugged Cross" is a popular hymn written in 1912 by American evangelist and song-leader George Bennard (1873–1958).