Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina 1903

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Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina 1903
Panjshanbe Bazaar.
Khujand, Tajikistan.
© Roberto Conte (2023)
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Bazar/ Isfahan/ Iran
Photo: Siavash banaei
děcka mám hromadu přízí, se kterými už nic nevymyslím. chcete je někdo? předání v Brně. nic za to nechcu.
jsou to 100% bavlny, protože jsem snob, to Nako Estiva je možná čistý bambus nebo bavlna/bambus mix
Já ani nevím, co bych k tomuhle měla napsat... asi jen: vyměň kartářku?
Tunduk purchase at Koyandinsk-Botovsk fair. S.M. Dudin. 1899.
Moving freely across the steppe, the nomads carried with them their mobile houses—yurts.
“The preferred house of a nomad, the yurt is a tent 4 meters in diameter and 3-4 meters high with a conical roof. The yurt is covered with white felt that is 2 cm thick; a piece of felt is attached at the entrance and serves as a door.”
Dudin paid much attention to the yurts: their “movable architecture,” assembly, felt coverings, and interior decorations. He also photographed certain elements of the mobile dwelling—namely changarak, kerege, and tunduk—and explored how these yurt parts were purchased. Photo shows the purchase of a tunduk at the famous Kuyanda-Botov Fair. The fair took place for a month each year, from May 25 to June 25, between 1848 and 1930 in the valley of the river Taldy. The annual fair can be described as international: many traders and buyers from the Great Steppe.
Coffee time - Cairo, 2018