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Resolução Web
365×550px
12.9×19.4cm 28ppcm
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Baixa resolução
690×1039px
24.4×36.7cm 28ppcm
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Média resolução
1527×2300px
12.9×19.5cm 118ppcm
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Alta resolução
3387×5100px
28.7×43.2cm 118ppcm
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- africano
- Alberto Biscaro
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- artesão
- arte tradicional
- Bright
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- cores vibrantes
- dia
- étnico
- foto
- fotografia
- jóia
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- mulher
- Nairobi
- natureza morta
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- olhando para baixo
- olhar
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Imagens relacionadas
- Woman Working with Kazuri Beads, Nairobi, Kenya
- People Making Kazuri Jewelry, Nairobi, Kenya
- Display of Kazuri Jewelry, Nairobi, Kenya
- Kazuri Jewelry, Kenya
- A Swahili woman in Lamu makes makuti, a coconut palm thatch used extensively as a roofing material on houses all along the East African Coast.Situated 150 miles north northeast of Mombasa, Lamu town dates from the 15th century AD.
- Handmade Baskets at Masai Market, Nairobi, Kenya
- Masai Market, Nairobi, Kenya, Africa
- A Turkana woman sitting in the doorway of her hut. Her heavy mporro braided necklace identifies her as a married woman. Typical of her tribe,she wears many layers of bead necklaces and a beaded headband.
Mais imagens relacionadas
- A Turkana woman,typically wearing many layers of bead necklaces and a series of hooped earrings with an pair of leaf-shaped earrrings at the front,sits in the entrance to her hut.
- An old Turkana woman,typically wearing many layers of bead necklaces and a series of hooped earrings with an pair of leaf-shaped earrings at the front.
- A young Amhara lady weaves a traditional food basket from dried grasses. These large colourful baskets are used for serving injera,a fermented,bread-type pancake,which is the country's national dish.She is wearing the national dress of Ethiopia - a shamma. This garment is made of homespun cotton with a finely woven and often brightly coloured border.
- Child Weaving Carpet, Egypt
- Merchandise at Masai Market, Nairobi, Kenya, Africa
- Samburu girls are given strings of beads by their fathers when they are still young. As soon as they are old enough to have lovers from the warrior age set, they regularly receive gifts from them.Over a period of years, their necklaces can smother them up to their necks.
- A Samburu woman wearing a mporro necklace, which denotes her married status. These necklaces were once made of hair from giraffe tails but nowadays, the fibres of doum palm fronds, Hyphaene coriacea, are used instead.The red beads after which the necklace is named are wound glass beads made in Venice c.1850.
- A Nyangatom woman wears multiple layers of beads in necklaces, an elaborately beaded calfskin skirt and metal bracelets, amulets and anklets. She is standing beside a temporary beehive construction of sticks, grass and leaves built to provide shade for her goats. The Nyangatom or Bume are a Nilotic tribe of semi-nomadic pastoralists who live along the banks of the Omo River in south western Ethio