Summary

Embroidered breast apron which reflects the traditional style of the Dumre region in central Albania. It was made around 1900 and was purchased, as part of a traditional costume, in 1997 by Mustafe and Sanije Memishi in Kruja, Albania during their first pilgrimage back to their homeland after migrating to Australia in the 1960s.

The costume was selected by daughters Esmine and Lirije who were drawn to its simple folkloric design. The Memishi daughters wore the costume to the Albanian Festival at Footscray Park up until the mid 2000s.

This is a special occasion costume worn at weddings, engagements and sacred cultural ceremonies. It is a simple style of dress, enhanced through a variety of decorative elements including textures, weaves, and colours. The costume would traditionally have been further adorned with decorative jewellery, usually in the form of a coin necklace. This jewellery would have been presented to the wearer on special occasions and placed in an embroidered wool woven tote, made to hold gifts and items when attending functions in distant villages. The dress apron and scarf enable the wearer to continue their domestic duties while remaining respectably attired, according to the requirements of Albanian society of the early 1900s.

Physical Description

Cream cotton breast apron with predominantly red embroidery in the front square and along the bottom edge. There are a pair of tie strings at each side of neck hole and a tie string down side attached with a button. Button on opposite indicates the other string is missing.

Significance

This costume represents an active effort by one family to re-connect with and preserve their cultural traditions, by transporting the costume to Australia where it could act as a tangible reminder of their cultural heritage and actively used in cultural celebrations. The costume also represents the vanishing needlecraft skills of Albanian women, symbolising the important role women have played in the traditions of artistic production.

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