A Himba mother and baby son relax outside their dome-shaped home. Their bodies gleam from a mixture of red ochre, butterfat and herbs. The mother's long hair is styled in the traditional Himba way and is crowned with a headdress made of lambskin, called erembe. All her garments are made of leather. Her son already wears a white-beaded necklace, called ombwari, and a decoration of metal beads backed on leather. Most married women wear a large conch shell, ohumba, between their breasts. These prized possessions are traded from Angola and are passed down from mother to daughter. The Himba are Herero-speaking Bantu nomads who live in the harsh, dry but starkly beautiful landscape of remote northwest Namibia. Purros

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TOP06638314

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達志影像

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RM

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