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Ukrainian clothing

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ushanka
thumb|Sheepskin ushanka winter hat with earflaps
vyshyvanka
thumb|Vasily Tropinin, Lady from [[Podolia, before 1821. A woman in vyshyvanka]] thumb|Basic structure of garment
wimple
thumb|A wimple as shown in Portrait of a Woman, 1430–1435, by Robert Campin (1375/1379–1444), National Gallery, London. The wimple is constructed of four layers of cloth and the pins holding it in place are visible at the top of the head. thumb|Monumental brass of Margaret, Lady Camoys (d.1310), St George's Church, Trotton, West Sussex. This is the earliest surviving brass of a female figure in England. She wears around her neck a wimple (or gorget) which hides the chin and sides of the face. This style of dress continued in fashion until the end of the reign of King Edward III (1327–1377).
żupan
thumb|Polish magnate [[Jan Zamoyski (1542-1605) dressed in a crimson delia over a blue silk żupan, and tied with a pas kontuszowy. The right hand holds a buława.]] Żupan (; , , , , ) is a long lined garment of West or Central Asian origin which was widely worn by male nobles in the multi-ethnic Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and by the Ukrainian Cossacks in the Cossack Hetmanate. It was a typical upper class male attire from the late 16th to the first half of the 18th century.
kozhukh
thumb|right|Kozhukh in the Buchach Museum A kozhukh () is a traditional Ukrainian fur coat.
ochipok
thumb|Traditional Ukrainian headdress
Captain's cap
cap with a soft dark blue or white crown and a stiff dark visor, often decorated with braid
Ukrainian traditional costumes
Ukrainian folk clothing