Yao costumes: Yao costumes are rich in styles. Different self-proclaimed Yao people have different costumes. Most of them wear black or dark blue clothes, mostly self-woven white cloth, dyed with indigo. There are two kinds of men's jackets: double-breasted and diagonal. There are usually belts. Pants vary in length, some reaching to the feet and some reaching to the knees. Most of them are covered with black and long Baotou cloth. The man in Dayaozhai, Nandan County is known as "White Ku Yao" wearing knee-length white bloomers with leggings. Yao women are good at embroidery, and their clothes are embroidered with various colors and bright colors. There are roughly two kinds of women's dresses: one is a long gown with a crotch, a collarless double lapel, embroidery and embroidery beside the cuffs at the lapel, a colored silk embroidered belt at the waist, a rectangular cloth hanging on the chest, and embroidered patterns on the cloth. Pants vary in length and are tattered and patterned. The sideburns are long, the head is wrapped with green cloth, and the flat belt is woven with white thread. I also like to use colored beads and silver strings. The other is to wear a collarless sleeveless coat, embroidered with two lapels, waist-tied, pleated skirt with blue floral white edge, and trouser legs wrapped in cloth. Yao women wear all kinds of buns. For example, some "Pan Yao" women only keep the hair on the top of their heads, but shave off the hair around them, leaving only the braids on their heads, which are wrapped in long black cloth and look like straw hats; I like to wear all kinds of silver ornaments, such as collars, bracelets, earrings, silver medals, wallets, rings and so on. There are many kinds of headdresses, such as a board with a length of six inches and a width of three inches on the top of Pingyao, which is tied with a red rope and covered with a handkerchief with beads hanging from the front and back; "Blue Indigo Yao" has a thin braid and puts it on the top of the head. Bamboo slices are strung into a round plate decorated with five-color beads, covered on the head, and then bloom again. The gold hairpin embroidered by Chashan Yao in Dayao Mountain has three large arc-shaped silver hairpin on its head (each treaty weighs one catty).