...Gorean dancing silk...low upon her bared hips and fell to her ankles. It was scarlet, diaphanous. A front corner of the silk was taken behind her and thrust, loose and draped, into the rolled silk knotted about her hips; a back corner of the silk was drawn before her and thrust loosely, draped, into the rolled silk at her right hip. Low on her hips she wore a belt of small denomination, threaded, overlapping golden coins. A veil concealed her muchly...tucked into the strap of the coined halter at her left shoulder and into the coined belt at her right hip.  Tribesmen of Gor, pg 8

She wore a long, bordered skirt, with scarlet thread at its hem...a jacket, tan of soft kaiila-hair cloth with a hood...a cheap, printed blouse of rep-cloth. Tribesmen of Gor, pg 137

a brief second-hand, black-and-white-striped, rep-cloth slave djellaba. It came high on her thighs. Tribesmen of Gor, pg 72

..unhooked her slave halter of yellow silk...slowly disengaged the dancing silk from her hips...Tribesmen of Gor, pg 105

...high, tight vest of red silk with four hooks; her midriff was bare; she wore the sashed chalwar, a sashed, diaphanous trousered garment, full but gathered closely at the ankles...she was veiled...Tribesmen of Gor, pg 105

She wore a high, red-silk vest, swelling, fastened with a single hook; diaphanous red-silk chalwar, low on her hips, gathered at the ankles...Tribesmen of Gor, pg 157

Low on her hips she wore, on a belt of rolled cloth, yellow dancing silk, in Turian drape, the thighs bare, the front right corner of the skirt thrust behind her to the left, the back left lower corner of the skirt thrust into the rolled belt at her right hip....a yellow-wilk halter, hooked high... Tribesmen of Gor, pg 87

slave veil...tiny, triangular yellow veil, utterly diaphanous covering the lower portion of the face, drawn back and held behind the ears, across the bridge of the nose. Tribesmen of Gor, pg 69

 
Free women, in the Tahari, incidentally, usually, when out of their houses, also measure their stride. Some fasten their own ankles together with silken thongs.  Tribesmen of Gor, pg 45

The haik, black, covers the woman from head to toe. At the eyes there is a tiny bit of black lace, through which she may see. On her feet were soft, black, nonheeled slippers, with curled toes; they were decorated with a line of silver thread. Tribesmen of Gor, pg 44

She wore a soft gown, flowing, yellow, long, of Turian silk, it was sheer and with its deep neckline and about the hips, well betrayed her. Tribesmen of Gor, pg 196

She wore the mannish garb of the Tahari, save that she did not wear the wind veil nor the kaffiyeh and agal...thrown-back hood of the burnoose...The left trouser leg had been slashed...slashes at the left sleeve...Tribesmen of Gor, pg 328

A woman, veiled, passed me. She held a baby inside her cloak, nursing it.  Tribesmen of Gor, pg 41

"Do free women on Gor not wear earrings?" asked Alyena.
"Never," I said. Tribesmen of Gor, pg 138

 
Their garments are loose and voluminous, yet closely woven. The outer garment when in caravan, usually the burnoose, is almost invariably white.  This color reflects the rays of the sun.  Tribesmen of Gor, pg 73

He wore a head scarf, the wrapped turban...of rep-cloth...lower-class males-it provides a soft cushion on which boxes and other burdens may be carried. Tribesmen of Gor, pg 36

...in silken kaftan, and kaffiyeh and agal...Tribesmen of Gor, pg 111
 

...in black cloak, and white kaffiyeh with black cording... Tribesmen of Gor, pg 119

...white robes with red sashes and scimitars, the police of Tor. Tribesmen of Gor, pg 51

He wore a striped, hooded, sleeved, loose robe, a djellaba. Tribesmen of Gor, pg 44

...desert boots...soft, heelless slippers commonly worn indoors in permanent residences in the Tahari, with extended, curling toes. Tribesmen of Gor, pg

He wore desert boots, canvas trousers, baggy, a red sash; in the sash was thrust a dagger, curved....he wore kaffiyeh and agal, though of rep-cloth, the cording, too of rep-cloth, twisted into narrow cord.  Tribesmen of Gor, pg 241
 

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