Noura, a 30-year-old Iranian woman raised in a religious household, wore a head-to-toe black veil known as a chador from a young age. Not any more.
At a fashion event in northern Tehran late last year she wore a long-sleeved white shirt under a toe-length navy vest with her hair fully covered by a white, pink and blue scarf: not an outfit traditionally associated with conservative Iranian women. But Noura was there in search of the latest trends to blend her faith with her interest in fashion.
“The chador is not the only option,” she said. “We still wear the hijab, but we do it with a sense of style and fashion.”
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