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guayabera

 
Dictionary: gua·ya·ber·a   (gwī'ə-bĕr'ə) pronunciation

n.
A light open-necked cotton shirt, often with large pockets and pleats down the front, that is typically worn outside the pants.

[American Spanish.]


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Two guayaberas seen from the back

The guayabera is a men's shirt popular in Latin America, the Caribbean, Southeast Asia, the West Indies, and Zimbabwe. It is also referred to as a "Mexican Wedding Shirt.[1][2]

Contents

History

The origin of the garment is disputed, as various claims for the distinctive style have been made in several Latin America countries as well as the Philippines.[3] While most Latin Americans believe guayaberas are of Cuban, or at least Caribbean, origin, many Mexicans believe that the guayabera was created in the Yucatán peninsula of Mexico.

A "spin" on the shirt's origins states that Mexicans either copied the design concept from the "El Encanto" store of Cuba, or emulated the trend from Cuban tourists who visited Mexico. There is also the stated fact that a similar, prototypical shirt has existed since the 18th century. [3]

The origin of the name Guayabera may come from a Cuban legend that tells of a poor countryside seamstress sewing large pockets into her husband's shirts for carrying guava (guayabas) from the field.[3][4] Guayabera may also have originated from the word yayabero, the word for a person who lived near the Yayabo River in Cuba.[3][5]

Though commonly called guayabera in Yucatán or camisa de Yucatan in Mexico, the shirt is sometimes referred to as a "Mexican Wedding Shirt."[2]

Design

The guayabera shirt is distinguished by several details: either two or four patch pockets and two vertical rows of alforzas (fine, tiny pleats, usually 10, sewn closely together) running along the front and back of the shirt (the pockets are separately detailed with identical, properly aligned alforzas).[4]

In Mexico, Puerto Rico, and Panama guayaberas designed from linen are generally considered the most popular attire for beach weddings due to their combination of style and comfort of wear.[2]

The top of each pocket is usually adorned with a matching shirt button, as are the bottoms of the alforza pleats. Vertical rows of adjusting buttons are often seen, one on each side, at the bottom hem. While most versions of the design have no placket covering the buttons, a few newer designs do.

The bottom of some shirts have three-inch slits on either side, and these include adjusting buttons. The Mexican shirt will usually have two or three such buttons at the bottom, on each side. It has a straight-bottom hem, thus it is not tucked into the trousers.[6]

Though traditionally worn in white and pastels, guayaberas are now available in many colors. Black, heavily embroidered with tiny colorful flowers and with French cuffs, has for many decades been extremely popular in Mexico. [7]

In Puerto Rico, guayaberas are the national costume for men.[8]

In Zimbabwe, the short sleeve Cuban version is worn for special occasions.[9] The shirt was brought to Africa by Cuban teachers who once lived there.

Today, it has replaced the safari suit for special occasions. White shirts are worn with black dress pants to weddings and black shirts are worn to funerals. The same, short sleeve Cuban version is worn as office wear in Jamaica and Trinidad.[9] In Zimbabwe and Britain the guayabera is called a Safari shirt. In Jamaica it is known as a bush jacket and in Trinidad, it is called a shirt-jac.

The shirt-jac (also known as a "jac" for short, or a "summer jac") has become a popular clergy shirt in the last thirty years; though these shirts avoid the Guayabera design details, several companies such as Toomey of Chicago and Wippell's of England/New Jersey offer such shirts. Many clerics purchase fine Guayabera shirts and have the collars re-tailored into clergy collars.

Popularity in the United States

In the past, guayaberas were typically sold to and associated with older men ranging from 45 to 75. When retro clothing styles began to make a resurgence in recent years, the consumer base began to shift to a significantly younger audience.[6]

In some countries and in several areas of Florida, the guayabera is often an acceptable form of office wear as a means of coping with hot weather.[7]

Similar shirts

In the Philippines national dress which the guayabera bears its similarity, the Barong Tagalog. The Barong Tagalog is an elegant, typically long-sleeved shirt. Its major difference from the traditional guayabera is that it typically has no pockets, whereas a guayabera often has four.[3]

In the Samoan islands the shirt style has been introduced into the masculine formal attire known as the "safari set" which pairs a solid-colored linen ie faitaga (a tailored, formal version of the "lava-lava" wrap) with a matching button-down shirt. The most common "safari" shirt resembles the pocketed khaki shirts stereotypically donned by Australian zoo workers and African safari tour guides but guayabera-like shirts are now commonly seen, especially in American Samoa where the majority of tailor shops are operated by ethnic Filipino tailors. The type seen in Samoa often includes tightly-sewn vertical pleats and two to four buttoned pockets front.

See also

References


 
 
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Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Guayabera" Read more