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    18.03.2024

    Hadyach vyshyvanka: The Story of Blue-Violet Threads and Cultural Identity

    Traditionally, Ukrainian homemakers opted for the color red when it came to shirts, as it was easily obtained from plants or wax insects. However, in the Poltava region, there were special shirts embroidered with blue-violet threads, a color that couldn’t be achieved with natural dyes. These unusual blue threads could be purchased at the markets of Hadiach. Today, these shirts are known as Hadiach shirts. But once they were called something completely different – “zhidyvky”, because of the blue ornaments. Indigo dyes from India were brought by Jewish merchants, and that’s why the locals of Hadiach referred to their shirts as “zhidyvky”, and the threads as “zhidivsky”. Such shirts were popular in villages like Lysivka, Plyshivets, Brovarky, Velbivka, Khittsi, and so on.

    Hadyach vyshyvanka: The Story of Blue-Violet Threads and Cultural Identity

    The pattern on our Hadyach vyshyvankas is reproduced from an authentic early 20th-century shirt from this region. These shirts are available to order in either dark indigo or black, which some of our customers find to be more versatile and better suited to complementing the rest of their wardrobe.

    If you wish to order the dark indigo embroidery, simply add a note to your order.

    Hadyach vyshyvanka: The Story of Blue-Violet Threads and Cultural Identity