Hunted Stuffed Bird Hanging From the Ceiling of a Tent, Chahar Bori Tribal Subdibision of Bakhtiari Nomads, Winter Settlement Near Masjed Soleyman, Khuzestan Province, IRAN - 10/04/2017. Bakhtiaris are a tribe of ca. 1 million people who live in the Zagros mountains. Some are still nomadic pastoralists, migrating between summer and winter quarters. Bakhtiaris have been able to keep their civilization intact through mostly marrying within their own tribe. Men wear a costume composed of a felt cap (kolah), a shirt and vest, long trousers of varying degrees of fullness, and sandals (giveh). Typical male costume is the chuqa, a straight, knee-length, sleeveless tunic of natural white wool with vertical indigo stripes. The trousers (shalwlar-e Dabit) constitute are the most distinctive part of Bakhtiari male dress: they are black and cut very wide (120 cm around the leg). Costumes of women consist of a headdress, a knee-length dress slit on the sides with long sleeves and a long, colorful, 8 to 10 m long several-layered full skirt gathered around the waist. Skirts are paired with separate shirts and matching vests or shawls. Long scarves and wraps for the head are also commonly worn with ornaments (e.g. coins) or hand-stitched designs sewn in. Credit : Francois-Olivier DOMMERGUES/SIPA.//DOMMERGUESFO_20170410.IRN.015