Color: light blue
Size: 30x50cm
Material: terrycloth, 100% cotton
Material weight: 400 g/m²
Care: machine washable at 60°C
Toweling is a fabric woven with many protruding loops of thread which can absorb large amounts of water, embroidered with traditional motifs of the northem part of the Great Hungarian Plain.
These nice flowers are traditional embroidery motifs of the northem part of the Great Hungarian Plain, that is also known as Jazygia, named after the last ancient Indo-Iranian people who moved into the Carpathian Basin in the 13th century. They have preserved their cultural identity until the present day. The ornamentation displayed tendrils and flowers, which are typical of nomadic cultures. From the Middle Ages this was mainly used by furriers for decorating jackets and other outerwears.
Color: light blue
Size: 50x90cm
Material: terrycloth, 100% cotton
Material weight: 400 g/m²
Care: machine washable at 60°C
Toweling is a fabric woven with many protruding loops of thread which can absorb large amounts of water, embroidered with traditional motifs of the northem part of the Great Hungarian Plain.
These nice flowers are traditional embroidery motifs of the northem part of the Great Hungarian Plain, that is also known as Jazygia, named after the last ancient Indo-Iranian people who moved into the Carpathian Basin in the 13th century. They have preserved their cultural identity until the present day. The ornamentation displayed tendrils and flowers, which are typical of nomadic cultures. From the Middle Ages this was mainly used by furriers for decorating jackets and other outerwears.
Color: light blue
Size: 70x130cm
Material: terrycloth, 100% cotton
Material weight: 400 g/m²
Care: machine washable at 60°C
Toweling is a fabric woven with many protruding loops of thread which can absorb large amounts of water, embroidered with traditional motifs of the northem part of the Great Hungarian Plain.
These nice flowers are traditional embroidery motifs of the northem part of the Great Hungarian Plain, that is also known as Jazygia, named after the last ancient Indo-Iranian people who moved into the Carpathian Basin in the 13th century. They have preserved their cultural identity until the present day. The ornamentation displayed tendrils and flowers, which are typical of nomadic cultures. From the Middle Ages this was mainly used by furriers for decorating jackets and other outerwears.
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