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Baibarak (from the Turkic languages - a type of rich coarse cloth) is an upper ancient male and female autumn-winter outfit, similar to a sardak and a petek. In many villages of the Kolomyia region, they sewed from home-made battered cloth of black or gray colors, without wedges, with colored or monochromatic stitching from cords and tassels on the chest.
Baybarak was worn until the 1950s by the inhabitants of the villages of the Kolomiy region. It was quite warm and strong clothing, but not comfortable. The National Museum of Ukrainian Folk Decorative Art preserves more than 60 baibaraks from the villages of Velykyi Chelyiv, Verbizha, Gvizdets, Zamulintsy, Kyydanch, Knyazhdvor, Korpych, Pechenizhyn, Pidgaychykiv, Sopov, and Tseniava.
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