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[[File:Ainu-robes.jpg|right|thumb|320px|Ainu robes on display at the East-West Center in Honolulu]]
 
[[File:Ainu-robes.jpg|right|thumb|320px|Ainu robes on display at the East-West Center in Honolulu]]
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Traditional [[Ainu]] garb includes bark cloth robes called ''attus'', and embroidered cotton robes called ''ruunpe'' and ''ciciri'', as well as several other types of garments.
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Traditional [[Ainu]] garb includes bark cloth robes called ''[[attus]]'', and embroidered cotton robes called ''[[ruunpe]]'' and ''ciciri'', as well as several other types of garments.
    
Ainu robes can be found in many anthropological or natural history collections around the world; while these robes are still made and used in Ainu communities, there are also Ainu today both in [[Hokkaido|Hokkaidô]] and in the [[Kanto|Kantô]] who work to recreate old traditional motifs and forms. It can take up to a full year to produce a traditional garment; each embroidered design must be sewn three times over.
 
Ainu robes can be found in many anthropological or natural history collections around the world; while these robes are still made and used in Ainu communities, there are also Ainu today both in [[Hokkaido|Hokkaidô]] and in the [[Kanto|Kantô]] who work to recreate old traditional motifs and forms. It can take up to a full year to produce a traditional garment; each embroidered design must be sewn three times over.
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