White Crown
Pharaohs wore the royal Deshret (Red Crown), Hedjet (White Crown), Peshent (Red and White Crown), Khepresh (Blue Crown) and Nemes (Head-Cloth Crown). The queens wore Cap-Crown or other fancy headdresses).
gold
Pharaoh wore it when the priests prepared him for the afterlife. (mummification)
A skirt a hat and a cloth go tee.
It was a combination of the crowns of Upper Egypt and Lower Egypt, symbolising the unification of Egypt.
they wore the double crown to symbolize their rule over Upper and Lower Egypt.
Cleopatra wore a uraeus of three cobras.
The symbol of Upper Egypt is a tall, white crown.The symbol of Lower Egypt is the red crown. So, if you were leader of both, you would wear the double crown(one inside the other). However, the pharaoh would also have a variety of other headdresses to wear eg. the nemes headdress, or the blue war crown, etc.
you have to wear a fake beard and a crown. you throw a party every year for the rising of the Nile river. you plan constructions and war strategies.
Yes, Hatshepsut, the fifth pharaoh of the Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt, is often depicted wearing the double crown, known as the Pschent, which symbolized the unification of Upper and Lower Egypt. This crown was typically associated with kingship and authority. Hatshepsut adopted male attributes and regalia, including the double crown, to assert her power and legitimacy as a female pharaoh. Her imagery often blends traditionally male royal symbols with her feminine identity.
clothes
maybe coogi or crown holder It Was Coogi