umm...nowhere....venus' gravity is like 3 times what earths is so it would crush us to dust...and then the 400 degrees surface temperature would melt us
She wore a white toga that looked like a dress.
flax
you can say the girdle she wore which made anyone who looked at her fall in love/o made her even more beautiful to them
The Chumash Indians in warm weather wore very little clothing. The men primarily wore a belt to carry their tools. The women generally wore skirts and aprons. In the winter they would wear capes made from animal skins, plant fibers or even feathers from birds. Now the Chumash wear everything everyone else wears.
They wore little clothing. In the summer they wore breach cloth and in the witer wore capes made of rabbot skins. They made sandels from plant fibers. Sometimes they wore feathered headdress and often painted or tattooed their bodies. They looked very similar to the jumano indians.
The Chumash Indians in warm weather wore very little clothing. The men primarily wore a belt to carry their tools. The women generally wore skirts and aprons. In the winter they would wear capes made from animal skins, plant fibers or even feathers from birds. Now the Chumash wear everything everyone else wears.
They wore imported cotton or a fiber made from the century plant and the women would weave it into clothing. They had a vast trading territory so they also had dyes to color their clothing. Slaves wore loincloth, women wore skirts and a sleeveless blouse or shirt.
babies wore puddings and men wore greatshirts,women wore shirts that would hide berry stains
The Chumash Indians in warm weather wore very little clothing. The men primarily wore a belt to carry their tools. The women generally wore skirts and aprons. In the winter they would wear capes made from animal skins, plant fibers or even feathers from birds. Now the Chumash wear everything everyone else wears.
The Tocobaga people typically wore minimal clothing made from plant fibers such as palmetto leaves. They would wrap these fibers around their bodies in a simple loincloth style. Jewelry and ornaments made from shells and bones were also common among the Tocobaga.
No....................and yes. If you wore them in your hat you probably wouldn't but if you wore them on a pair of shoes or high heel's you most certainly WOULD!
well, one would probably think they wore clothes, they would be mistaken. They wore actually nothing...hope i helped