A Galla girl from Kenya's Coast Province.
Oferta introductoria
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Resolución de Internet
450×550px
15.9×19.4cm 28ppcm
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Baja resolución
767×936px
27.1×33.1cm 28ppcm
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Mediana resolución
1697×2072px
14.4×17.5cm 118ppcm
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Alta resolución
4800×5861px
40.6×49.6cm 118ppcm
* Precio final basado en el uso, no en el tamaño del archivo.
Palabras clave relacionadas
- 862-
- aborigen
- África
- africano (hombre y mujer)
- africano (lugares y cosas)
- africano (perteneciente a Africa)
- AWL Images
- bello
- cadena
- cadena (joyería)
- collar
- cuenta
- cultura
- decoración
- elaborado
- femenino
- fotógrafia
- fotografía (arte)
- fotógrafias
- gente
- imagen a color
- indígena
- infantil
- jóvenes
- keniano
- Kenya
- menor
- menores
- niña
- niño
- niño (niño y niña)
- ornamentado
- precioso
- pureza
- pureza (inocencia)
- retrato
- ropa tradicional
- sacar fotos
- tradición
- tribal
Imágenes relacionadas
- A young Maasai girl wears a headband decorated with chains and cowrie shells that signifies her recent circumcision. Clitodectomy was commonly practiced by the Maasai but it is now gradually dying out.
- A close-up of a Pokot woman's earrings,hairstyle and beaded ornaments. Only married women wear brass earrings and glass-beaded collars. The band over her head supports the weight of her heavy earrings.
- A young married woman of the Pokot tribe. Her married status is denoted by her large brass earrings and broad beaded collars and necklaces that are smeared with animal fat to glisten in the sun.
- A young Pokot girl in traditional attire. Girls wear leather skirts and capes made from home-tanned goatskins. Her broad necklaces are made from small segments of sedge grass. Her ears have already been pierced in four places,ready to insert the large brass earrings she will acquire after marriage.
- A young Maasai girl keeps the holes in her pierced ears from closing with grass and rolled leaves. She will gradually stretch her earlobes by inserting progressively larger wooden plugs. By tradition,both Maasai men and women pierce and elongate their earlobes for decorative purposes.
- Turkana women and girls are responsible for watering livestock,which is unusual among pastoral societies. Here,a young girl waters goats from a waterhole dug in the sand of a seasonal watercourse. Her young brother will control the flow of stock to the water trough. In the background,a man digs out another waterhole; they have to been deepened regularly towards the end of the dry season.
- Turkana women and girls are responsible for watering livestock,which is unusual among pastoral societies. Here,a girl waters cattle from a Waterhole dug in the sand of a seasonal watercourse. The Turkana manipulate the horns of their ox's into perfect symmetry or any whimsical shape that takes the owner's fancy.
- Detail of a Maasai warrior's ear ornaments and other beaded or metal adornments. The Maasai practice of piercing ears in adolescence and gradually elongating the lobes is gradually dying out. This warrior's body and his long braids have been smeared with red ochre mixed with animal fat.
Más imágenes relacionadas
- Turkana girls return home from a Waterhole with water containers made of wood. Their cloaks are goatskin embellished with glass beads.
- A young Maasai girl wearing a wooden plug in her pierced ear to elongate the earlobe. It has been a tradition of the Maasai for both men and women to pierce their ears and elongate their lobes for decorative purposes. Her two lower incisors have been removed - a common practice that may have resulted from an outbreak of lockjaw a long time ago.
- Young Maasai girls decorate their faces with ochre and clay in preparation for a dance.
- A young Maasai girl in all her finery pauses at the entrance to her mother's home. The wall and roof of the house are plastered with a mixture of cow dung and soil.
- Maasai girls in all their finery and with bells tied round their legs wait at the entrance to a house before dancing with warriors.
- A young Maasai girl wears face paint and numerous beaded ornaments in preparation for a dance with warriors.
- Maasai warriors draw water from a deep well. The depth of wells is measured by the number of men required to bring water to the cattle troughs at the top of them. A three-man well will be about 24 feet deep since the buckets are thrown between the men in a rhythmic chant.
- A Maasai warrior blows a trumpet fashioned from the horn of a Greater Kudu. The strap is decorated with cowrie shells. Kudu-horn trumpets are only sounded to call men to arms or on ceremonial occasions.