- that
created the
JSLIST program, to
replace the
Chemical Protection Overgarment used by the U.S. Navy. The
JSLIST program worked on creating, testing...
-
especially shepherds and waggoners. Today, the word
smock refers to a
loose overgarment worn to
protect one's clothing, for
instance by a painter. The traditional...
- gawberdyne, gabarden, gaberdin, gabberdine)
signified a
fashionable overgarment, but by the 1560s it was ****ociated with co****
garments worn by the...
-
openings for
their eyes. It is
traditionally worn with an
abaya or
other overgarment. A
boshiyah is
essentially a
large square of thin
cotton gauze-like material...
- women,
particularly as part of the
traditional Faroese costume as an
overgarment. The
traditional Faroese national dress is also a
local handicraft that...
- Army
Combat Uniform have
eliminated the need for a
separate nighttime overgarment. The DNC's
design was made from
cross hatches and blotches,
which was...
- Miko
clothing (巫女装束, miko shōzoku) is the
clothing worn by miko (shrine maidens) at
Shinto shrines. Normally,
there are no
specific regulations for miko...
-
described in the
literature of this time period.
Women wearing a
sleeveless overgarment, with or
without hood, can be seen in
artistic representations of this...
-
American English as a
cobbler apron: a
lightweight open-sided
upper overgarment, of
similar design to its
medieval and
heraldic counterpart, worn in...
- and some
Jewish women. A
kittel (Yiddish: קיטל), a
white knee-length
overgarment, is worn by
prayer leaders and some
observant traditional Jews on the...