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Indian bracelet wearing statement (from the bracelet to see identity, age, etc. The woman wearing it)
India and Pakistan have basically the same customs in this regard.

No matter how old you are, you mainly wear glass bracelets. A person has multiple sets, and chooses different colors and fancy styles according to different colors of clothes. Alloy bracelets are also worn, but not as popular as glass bracelets. I also brought my gold bracelet. I will definitely bring it when I get married. Someone usually takes it. After all, they show wealth. The gold there is very well made. It's usually a dowry from parents. If the fashion trend changes, I will go to the goldsmith to make styles.

It's hard to tell whether you are rich or not from the bracelet, because Indians and Pakistanis care most about style and color matching, and rich people still wear glass bracelets.

Handstrings are generally 12 small sets, and more than 24 are large sets. The quantity is not fixed, you can adjust it yourself. However, less than 12 is rare, unless it is a large pattern bracelet. Therefore, the width is the basis for determining the quantity. Generally, the total width is more than 4 or 5 cm.

If a woman doesn't wear a bracelet, she is a widow. When the husband dies, the bracelet will fade, or as in the movie, if you hit the wall with your wrist, the bracelet will break.

In some parts of India and Pakistan, ancient traditions are still continuing. Forearms are full of bracelets until elbows are bent and arms are not, indicating unmarried. The bracelet is carried from the forearm to the armpit of the arm, indicating that you are married. Usually this kind of bracelet is not made of glass. Mainly bones, alloys and so on.

Glass bracelets are hand-made in India and Pakistan, which are easily broken, but you can buy them at any time. The most common thing is what color clothes are matched with what color glass bracelets, or large color blocks, or contrast colors. People over there are very talented in color.

As for other ornaments, such as the auspicious mole upstairs, it is true that widows don't order them, and some use vermilion, but now many young people don't order them, and they are colorful. Children use more black and cyan, indicating that children are ugly and can be safe. If the auspicious mole is red and big, it can only be ordered by ancient nobles. Now some middle-aged and elderly people or married people order it to show their noble caste. However, auspicious moles are rarely found in Pakistan.

Married women should sprinkle cinnabar on their hair, but now many people don't do that, but they must use it when they get married. If a man gestures to a woman: pointing his thumb and forefinger in the direction like a woman and making a gesture obliquely in front, it means that I want to marry you.

Besides wearing elaborate and complicated necklaces at weddings and parties, married women usually wear a wedding necklace, just like wedding rings in other countries. Wedding necklaces are made of rope, reaching to the chest, and often have pendants. This wedding necklace is basically the same. I wear it every day.

Widows not only do not have these rights, but their clothes can only be black and white.

But now India is developing rapidly and the feminist movement has begun. So there are still widows who still wear beautiful clothes, and those who are lucky or have a good family background still remarry.

Finally, in India and Pakistan, even beggars mostly wear gold nose nails. Gold is difficult to judge a person's identity. Because that's their daily necessities, hehe.