A handwoven cloth feels like a small archive of weather and gesture: the cotton is cool and slightly crisp at first touch, then softens with the heat and movement of a day. In much of Ethiopia those plain fields of white are not empty—they frame bands of color and pattern called tibeb, narrow looms' signatures worked into hems and cuffs. The patterns catch light like a modest lace, and when people move the cloth rustles in a low, familiar whisper, carrying the faint scent of starch and the memory of a loom room. These garments are rarely about hiding; they are about shaping presence, offering a surface for careful decoration and personal habit without shouting for attention. Women’s dress often centers on the habit of slow layering—a long, ankle-length dress known as the habesha kemis is usually paired with a sheer wrap called a netela, its edges threaded with tibeb. The netela can be drawn tight about the shoulders for a Sunday service or thrown loose over one arm during an afternoon market, and it blooms translucent in strong light.
Embroidery around the neckline or sleeves frames the face in a way that feels curated but lived-in, jewelry and hair sometimes echoing the same geometric motifs. In celebrations the fabrics gather weight from additional wraps and the careful arrangement of hair and beads; in quieter moments, the same materials are pared back to something very ordinary and particular to the wearer. Men’s traditional garments speak in a different rhythm: wide, comfortable trousers and a long shirt or tunic are often accompanied by a wider shawl—gabi or shamma—folded across the shoulders or wrapped like a blanket for evening. These pieces can be substantial, layered for warmth on cooler highland mornings or lifted away when the sun presses down. Turbans or simple head-wraps appear where shade is needed, and the way a shawl is tucked, flung, or balanced on an arm communicates practicality as much as style. Movement and climate shape choices as much as custom does; a shawl that has been wound for years knows the exact way to protect a neck from wind or to be stowed quickly while working.
The cloth itself carries family stories: a grandmother’s weaving technique, a village dye recipe, the small variations that travel down through hands. Many weavers at home and in workshops continue familiar patterns while others experiment with color, cut, and modern textiles, creating hybrids that feel rooted rather than forced. Garments are kept with attention—folded, aired in the sun, mended where needed—so that they accumulate the soft wear of regular use and the brighter marks of ceremony. Seen across a market, in a church courtyard, or on a roadside, traditional dress reads as a living language: adaptable, tactile, and threaded through daily life.