Pallium
At present, only the pope, metropolitan archbishops, and the Latin Rite Patriarch of Jerusalem wear the pallium.
It is an outer vestment worn by a priest.
A chasuble is a vestment worn by priests when they are saying mass. It is sleeveless, and is worn as an outer vestment. It is often quite decorated, and has the colors of the liturgical season. There is a link below to an article on the chasuble.
White vestments are worn
White or gold are the colors of the day.
The white vestment worn by the priest is called an alb ( from the latin "albus", meaning "white"). It also worn by deacons, servers, and occasionally Eucharistic ministers. A white vestment placed over the alb at Mass is called a chasuble for priests and dalmatic for daecons. That can be red, green, violet, or white. White is worn during certain liturgical seasons and holy days, but the alb is always white, sometimes "off" white or ivory.
No, the noun 'vestment' is a common noun, a general word for a ceremonial robe or garment worn for official purposes. A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing.
That vestment is called an "alb".
· veil · vest · vestment (worn by clergy during a ceremony) · v-neck sweater
· veil · vest · vestment (worn by clergy during a ceremony) · v-neck sweater
A pallium is a woollen vestment conferred on archbishops by the Pope, the mantle of a mollusc, or an anatomical term for the cerebral cortex.