File:Isparta Museum Anatolian Dresses 4973.jpg
The lady in the middle wears a similar silk two parts-costume, of which the blouse is named ‘sarka’. The front of this blouse, and the cuffs of both its long sleeves are adorned with gold thread embroidery, fastened in the so-called ‘kordon tutturma tekniği’ (= applied cord). Which means that the gold thread is laid down on the fabric in circular figures, and then fastened with a yellow silk thread. This kind of dress, both the model (named ‘Bahriye’ = ‘Navy’) and the embroidery work, are still produced today (in Eskişehir, for example). The ‘Bahriye’-model appeared in the early 1930s.
The first two dresses are festive (or high-class) costumes, the third one (the lady in green) is not. It is also composed of baggy trousers and a blouse, but has no decoration. On her feet, she wears thick knitted woollen socks; these are village-type indoors footwear, since (in traditional culture) all shoes that are worn outdoors have to be left behind, when entering the living areas of a house, where the (generally wooden) floors are covered with carpets.