From Fabric to Freedom: The Evolution of the Filipina Through Dress
Tracing the treacherous relationship between the fabric and colonization,this powerful exploration, terno, goes so much deeper into a threadbare metaphor for the Filipiniana's journey. From the humble tapís of pre-colonial life, far from being primitive, early Filipino society was rich with color, structure, and meaning. Clothes made out of fabric were not mere objects but represented class, belief systems, and spiritual identity. Women wore handwoven skirts called tapís, and the elite adorned themselves in silk, beads, and gold. There was power in simplicity and beauty in being authentically brown.
Then colonizers came. First, Spain and then America. With them came foreign and imported ideals. Modesty, Christianity, and whiteness became the new fashion. The tapís morphed into the more conservative baro't saya and finally the romanticized Maria Clara gown. Western beauty standards took hold. Even after independence, Filipinas were still expected to embody the ideals of their colonizers modest, meek, and, most troublingly, white skinned.
Fast forward to the American era, and fashion became a political tool. The terno s