The other most important and largest category of goods on the market is women’s clothing, textiles and accessories. Women are engaged in weaving. Skills are passed down from generation to generation through the female line. Interestingly, it is women who are the bearers (in every sense) of traditional clothing — the Maya men’s costume has not survived to the present day.
The men’s traditional costume of the pre-colonial period disappeared due to economic reasons. Its production was very expensive. There simply were no indigenous people left who could afford to make and wear it.
Representatives of the local government have costumes that they use during processions and solemn ceremonies, but in fact, they have existed in this form only since the time of the conquistadors. It is noticeable by their shape: the jacket and knee-length trousers resemble a traditional Spanish men’s outfit, elements of which in Spain itself have been preserved to this day in the outfits of bullfighters.
Chichicastenango, Quiché Department. 2018.
The main clothes of Indian women are a blouse "güipil", a skirt (a cloth sewn from two long stripes that wraps around the waist) and a belt supporting it — a sash — long and wide enough, with embroidery at one end on the front side. Sometimes such belts are woven rather than embroidered.
Chichicastenango, Quiché Department, Kʼicheʼ tribe. 2024. JFernando Morales Photography
There are two types of güipil — for everyday life and for ceremonies. The ceremonial blouse is white. Unfolded, it has the form of a cross. The embroidery around the collar symbolizes the sun and is often made with red threads.
Women who participate in processions and are related to cofradías, as well as during Indian holidays wear this blouse. Unlike the everyday, a darker version, they are more often worn without shoving into the belt.