Category
page 1Moroccan clothing
fez
cone-shaped cap with a flat crown
kaftan
thumb|Kurdish people|Kurdish man wearing a kaftan. Illustration by [[Max Karl Tilke published in Oriental Costumes: Their Designs and Colors (1922), Georgian National Museum, Tbilisi.]]
djellaba
thumb|Djellaba

burnous
thumb|Urban Algerian man wearing a white/beige burnous, 19thcentury
A burnous (), also burnoose, burnouse, bournous or barnous, is a long cloak of coarse woollen fabric with a pointed hood, often white, traditionally worn by Arab and Berber men in North Africa. Historically, the white burnous was worn during important events by men of high positions. Today, men of different social standing may wear it for ceremonial occasions, such as weddings or on religious and national holidays.
Takchita
The takshita (Berber: ⵜⴽⵛⵉⵟⴰ, , alternate spellings: taqchita, tackshita, tackchita) is a Moroccan traditional women's garment that, like the Moroccan kaftan, is worn for celebrations, particularly weddings.
chéchia
thumb|Tunisian man wearing a chechia.
The chechia (Arabic: شاشية ) is a traditional headgear worn in the Maghreb. Close relative to the European beret, the chechia is originally a cap-shaped bonnet, colored vermillon red. Until the 19th century, the chechia was often worn surrounded by a turban.
gandoura
thumb|Gandoura
thumb|A French Spahi uniform c.1960 consisting of a khaki gandoura and [[seroual, both under a white burnous.]]
The Gandoura, also Gandura (), is a kind of light tunic, in wool or cotton, with or without sleeves. It normally comes in colored stripes, or more simply white, and is worn primarily in North Africa and Western Asia. The term gandoura is Arabic in origin. In Algeria, there are two varieties of gandoura. The first is worn by women and is also known as Jebba Fergani. It is a traditional Algerian garment made of thick velvet that originated in the Constantine region. The
melhfa
thumb|Sahrawis|Sahrawi women wearing colorful melhfas