The baro’t saya or baro at saya is a traditional dress ensemble worn by women in the Philippines. It is a national dress of the Philippines and combines elements from both the precolonialnative Filipino and colonial Spanish clothing styles. It traditionally consists of four parts: a blouse, a long skirt, a kerchief worn over the shoulders, and a short rectangular cloth worn over the skirt. The baro't saya has multiple variants, including the aristocratictraje de mestiza ; the Visayankimona with its short-sleeved or poncho-like embroidered blouse paired with a patadyong skirt; as well as the unified gown known as the terno, and its casual and cocktail dress version, the balintawak. The masculine equivalent of baro't saya is the barong tagalog.
Etymology
Baro't saya is a contraction of "baro at saya", literally meaning "blouse and skirt", from Tagalogbaro and saya.
Description
Baro't saya is an ensemble that traditionally consists of four parts: the blouse, a long skirt, a kerchief worn over the shoulders, and a short rectangular cloth worn over the skirt.
History
Pre-colonial era
Baro't saya evolved from two pieces of clothing worn by both men and women in the pre-colonial period of the Philippines: the baro, a simple collar-less shirt or jacket with close-fitting long sleeves; and the tapis, a short rectangular or tube-like cloth worn wrapped around at waist or chest-height and secured with belts, braided material, or knotted over one shoulder. Women also usually wore bracelets over the baro. These types of clothing still survive in non-Christianized groups in the Philippines.
The Spanish clergy during the colonial period deemed the precolonial mode of dress as immodest for women and introduced the long skirt to be worn under the tapis. In the Visayas, the patadyong was tolerated for longer, although it was eventually also replaced with the saya in the 19th century. By the late 18th century, the traditional everyday wear of women in the Philippines consisted of two basic pieces of clothing known as the pares. This consisted of a saya reaching up to the ankles and a collar-less baro or camisa. The name pares was more closely associated with the skirt, which unlike later saya were narrow and sheath-like, resembling precolonial tapis. They were secured at the waist by strings and had wide, flat pleats along the waistline held together by pins. The baro was more or less identical to precolonial baro, with long narrow sleeves. Like later ensembles, these two pieces of clothing were usually complemented by a tapis and a kerchief around the shoulders known as the pañuelo, fichu, or alampay. The fabrics used for early sayas were usually native textiles. Later on in the 19th century, they began to use similar imported textiles, most notably the cambaya imported from India. The narrow width of the 18th-centuryparessaya, however, made them impractical for everyday life. By the 1820s to 1840s, the saya was replaced by a billowy western-style skirt known as the saya a la mascota. For women of the upper classes, they were usually ankle-length; while for women in the lower classes, they usually reached down to mid-calf to facilitate freer movement while working. Knee-length versions were also allowed for young girls. Designs and elements of the dress also later diverged sharply between the lower classes and the aristocratic Principalia classes from the mid-19th century onwards. The tapis for example, which was unique to Philippine women's attire, became much shorter between the 1840s to the 1860s. Due to this, they became more restricted to the native indios, while Spanish women and some mestizas avoided wearing it because of its resemblance to the delantal worn by servants. This dichotomy was depicted in José Rizal's novels where the mestiza protagonist Maria Clara wore a tapis and a baro't saya, while the pretentious Doña Consolacion wore European-style dresses without the tapis.