Sampot

Sampot

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*''Sampot hol'' ({{langx|km|សំពត់ ហល}}) is a weft ''chong kiet'' (or ''[[Ikat]]'') silk ''sampot'' (usually women's) bearing multi-colored designs achieved via resist-dying.{{cite book |last1=Berthon |first1=Magali An |title=100 Fashion and Textile Terms in Khmer, English, and French|date=2025|pages=78 |url=https://cdnc.heyzine.com/files/uploaded/v3/f291ee6df7f14bb4918ee849caf20598817a34a3.pdf}} ''Hol'' utilizes uneven twill groundweave, resulting in a brighter face on one side of the fabric than the other while the tone of the pattern itself remains consistent.{{cite book |last1=Greene |first1=Gillian |title=Traditional textiles of Cambodia : cultural threads and material heritage|date=2003|pages=89, 308 |url=https://archive.org/details/traditionaltexti0000gree/page/89/mode/2up}}
*''Sampot hol'' ({{langx|km|សំពត់ ហល}}) is a weft ''chong kiet'' (or ''[[Ikat]]'') silk ''sampot'' (usually women's) bearing multi-colored designs achieved via resist-dying.{{cite book |last1=Berthon |first1=Magali An |title=100 Fashion and Textile Terms in Khmer, English, and French|date=2025|pages=78 |url=https://cdnc.heyzine.com/files/uploaded/v3/f291ee6df7f14bb4918ee849caf20598817a34a3.pdf}} ''Hol'' utilizes uneven twill groundweave, resulting in a brighter face on one side of the fabric than the other while the tone of the pattern itself remains consistent.{{cite book |last1=Greene |first1=Gillian |title=Traditional textiles of Cambodia : cultural threads and material heritage|date=2003|pages=89, 308 |url=https://archive.org/details/traditionaltexti0000gree/page/89/mode/2up}}


*{{Transliteration|km|Sampot anlonh}} ({{langx|km|សំពត់អន្លូញ}}) refers to woven silk skirt cloth with a chequerboard design formed from two-colored weft and warp stripes over an undecorated groundweave, creating stripes along it's entirety.{{cite book |last1=Berthon |first1=Magali An |title=100 Fashion and Textile Terms in Khmer, English, and French|date=2025|pages=72 |url=https://cdnc.heyzine.com/files/uploaded/v3/f291ee6df7f14bb4918ee849caf20598817a34a3.pdf}}{{cite book |last1=Greene |first1=Gillian |title=Traditional textiles of Cambodia : cultural threads and material heritage|date=2003|pages=164,307 |url=https://archive.org/details/traditionaltexti0000gree/page/164/mode/2up}} It is commonly worn by women in the countryside.{{cite book |last1=Greene |first1=Gillian |title=Traditional textiles of Cambodia : cultural threads and material heritage|date=2003|pages=164 |url=https://archive.org/details/traditionaltexti0000gree/page/164/mode/2up}}
*{{Transliteration|km|Sampot anlonh}} ({{langx|km|សំពត់អន្លូញ}}) refers to woven silk skirt cloth with a chequerboard design formed from two-colored weft and warp stripes over an undecorated groundweave, creating stripes along its entirety.{{cite book |last1=Berthon |first1=Magali An |title=100 Fashion and Textile Terms in Khmer, English, and French|date=2025|pages=72 |url=https://cdnc.heyzine.com/files/uploaded/v3/f291ee6df7f14bb4918ee849caf20598817a34a3.pdf}}{{cite book |last1=Greene |first1=Gillian |title=Traditional textiles of Cambodia : cultural threads and material heritage|date=2003|pages=164,307 |url=https://archive.org/details/traditionaltexti0000gree/page/164/mode/2up}} It is commonly worn by women in the countryside.{{cite book |last1=Greene |first1=Gillian |title=Traditional textiles of Cambodia : cultural threads and material heritage|date=2003|pages=164 |url=https://archive.org/details/traditionaltexti0000gree/page/164/mode/2up}}


*{{Transliteration|km|Sampot rbauk}} ({{langx|km|សំពត់ល្បើក}}) is a long, silk damask-patterned ''sampot''. Patterns are done in silk or silk-esque thread and described in animal and plant terms, and often worn for formal events.{{cite book |last1=Green |first1=Gillian |title=Traditional textiles of Cambodia: cultural threads and material heritage|date=2003|pages=90|url=https://archive.org/details/traditionaltexti0000gree/page/90/mode/2up}}{{cite book |last1=BERTHON |first1=MAGALI AN |title=Silk and Post-Conflict Cambodia: Embodied Practices and Global and Local Dynamics of Heritage and Knowledge Transference (1991-2018)|date=2021|pages=407|url=https://researchonline.rca.ac.uk/4945/1/MBerthon-Thesis-Cambodia-Silk-redacted.pdf}}{{cite book |last1=Berthon |first1=Magali An |title=100 Fashion and Textile Terms in Khmer, English, and French|date=2025|pages=77 |url=https://cdnc.heyzine.com/files/uploaded/v3/f291ee6df7f14bb4918ee849caf20598817a34a3.pdf}}
*{{Transliteration|km|Sampot rbauk}} ({{langx|km|សំពត់ល្បើក}}) is a long, silk damask-patterned ''sampot''. Patterns are done in silk or silk-esque thread and described in animal and plant terms, and often worn for formal events.{{cite book |last1=Green |first1=Gillian |title=Traditional textiles of Cambodia: cultural threads and material heritage|date=2003|pages=90|url=https://archive.org/details/traditionaltexti0000gree/page/90/mode/2up}}{{cite book |last1=BERTHON |first1=MAGALI AN |title=Silk and Post-Conflict Cambodia: Embodied Practices and Global and Local Dynamics of Heritage and Knowledge Transference (1991-2018)|date=2021|pages=407|url=https://researchonline.rca.ac.uk/4945/1/MBerthon-Thesis-Cambodia-Silk-redacted.pdf}}{{cite book |last1=Berthon |first1=Magali An |title=100 Fashion and Textile Terms in Khmer, English, and French|date=2025|pages=77 |url=https://cdnc.heyzine.com/files/uploaded/v3/f291ee6df7f14bb4918ee849caf20598817a34a3.pdf}}