There are many styles of Yi clothing. In the past, both men and women liked to wear a sheepskin felt called "Chaiwa". It is shaped like a cloak, woven with wool, and is below the knees. The lower end is decorated with wool tassels, and is generally dark black. Before the age of 15, Yi girls wear red and white children's skirts and comb their hair into a single braid. When they turn 15, a ceremony called "Shala Luo" will be held, which means "changing skirts, combing double braids, and pulling ear threads", marking that the girl has grown up. Parents and relatives will give bracelets (bracelets are generally silver, with patterns that do not fit the mouth, so they are easy to take off, and some are jade. Some women also like to wear silver rings and gold rings). Wear a black mid-length long skirt for young girls, comb a single braid into a double braid, wear a headscarf embroidered with colorful flowers, and pull off the old thread used for piercing the ears in childhood and replace it with silver earrings. Yi men mostly wear black narrow-sleeved and lace-trimmed right-opening tops, and pleated wide-leg trousers. There is a lock of hair about three inches long on the top of the head, which is called "Tian Bodhisattva" in Chinese and "Zi'er" in Yi language. This is the way Yi men show their spirituality, and it must not be touched. The outside is wrapped with a green, blue or black turban that is more than ten feet long, and the right front is tied into a long cone-shaped "Zi'er" as thick as a thumb, which is called "hero bun" in Chinese. Men regard being beardless as beauty, and use their spare time to pluck out their beards one by one. They wear yellow or red ear beads strung with red silk thread on their ears, and red silk thread is decorated under the beads. Generally, men and women's tops are right-opening, tight-fitting, and the cuffs, collars, and lapels are embroidered with colorful lace. They wear a woolen cloak "Carwa", which is mostly black or woolen in color. Women's tops and pants are all wide Tang suits, usually in black, dark blue, light blue or green. On festive occasions, they wear clothes with green edges or black with blue edges. The cuffs have three black edges, the middle one is about 0.03-0.16 meters wide, and the other two circles are about 0.05 meters. The collars of young women and children are rolled into round edges. Old women wear dark aprons, and young women wear pure black aprons, most of which have lace, and some also hang small flower card clips made of tin, with silver chain rings as skirt belts. Young women wear gold hairpins and silver flower card clips on their heads, and old women tie a square layer of thick cloth on the back pad, about 0.23 meters long, so that they can carry a backpack. Women like to wear earrings, bracelets, rings, collar flowers and other gold and silver ornaments. Women wear a rectangular black scarf with red lace embroidered on it and silk thread on the other end. A 2-foot-long bandage is rolled with wool to fix the head. The bandage on one end naturally falls down along the front and top of the left or right ear. The bottoms are different for men and women. Men have three different sizes of trouser legs, the largest of which is 2 meters long and the smallest can only cover the ankle. Women's bottoms are "long pleated skirts" that are connected by several different colors of fabrics, with lace pasted on the seams. They are colorful and very beautiful.