Zhuang costumes are mainly blue, black and brown. Zhuang women have the habit of planting cotton and spinning yarn. Spinning, weaving and dyeing cloth is a family handicraft. The cloth woven with cotton yarn grown and spun by themselves is called "home-made", which is fine, thick, solid and wear-resistant, and then dyed into blue, black or brown. Daqing (a kind of plant) can be dyed into blue or cyan cloth, fish pond deep can be dyed into black cloth, and yam can be dyed into brown cloth. Zhuang costumes are different. The costumes of men and women, and the headdresses of men, women and unmarried women are all unique. Men's and women's clothing Men's clothing has two types: right-front and double-front. The right-front shirt has no collar and the button opens from the right armpit to the waist and then turns to the middle, and then opens three or four inches. The collar is inlaid with a colored cloth edge more than an inch wide, with copper buttons and a long belt; the double-front is open-chested and only reaches the navel. This is worn when working. Women's clothing is collarless and right-fronted, but the sleeves are larger than men's clothing, nearly a foot wide, knee-length, and inlaid with hems. The hems vary in width, usually more than two or three. The inner shoulder patch is placed on the outside, and the seams are three-lined, called "anti-shoulder shirt". The buttons of men's and women's shirts are copper or cloth buttons. The style of men's and women's pants is basically the same, with hems on the bottom of the pants, commonly known as "cow-head pants". Married women have lace bellybands, and a spike-shaped tube hangs on the left side of the waist pants, which is connected to the key and makes a "shala-chaola" sound when walking. Men usually wear a long gown as a formal dress, and a short jacket on the outside, commonly known as "long gown with a mandarin jacket". At first, they wore a round hat on their heads, but later they changed to a top hat. In modern times, the Zhuang ethnic group's clothing style has been basically modernized, but the older generation still generally wears blue and black. Peculiar headdresses: Unmarried women like to have long hair and bangs (to distinguish whether they are married or not). They usually comb the left side of their hair around to the right side (about 3:7) and fix it with a hairpin, or tie a long braid and tie a colorful scarf at the end of the braid. When working, they put the braid on the top of their heads and fix it. Married women wear a dragon and phoenix bun, gather their hair from back to front in a chicken (phoenix) hip style, and insert a silver or bone horizontal hairpin. Nowadays, it is rare to wear green gauze and white scarves. Most of them use black scarves or flower scarves. Most of them wear a bun and are middle-aged or older women. They like to wear embroidered forehead bands. In winter, women often wear black woolen hats, and the patterns of the hat edges vary according to age. Both men and women wear cloth shoes. Middle-aged women like to wear cat-ear cloth shoes made by themselves when working in the mountains. They are commonly known as shoe cats. They look like straw sandals, have ears and heels. The shoe ears and heels are strung together with a flat gauze ribbon and can be tied to adjust the tightness at will. Children's headdresses: Children's hats are non-top forehead-covering hats made of embroidered cloth strips two or three inches wide. Ancient books record the Zhuang customs of "exposing the head and going barefoot" and "wearing cloth tied to the forehead", which are reproduced on children's hats. This kind of forehead-covering hat can protect the head and is also a kind of decoration. The baby's sling is much larger than the common Han nationality ones. It is butterfly-shaped, with a "butterfly body" three feet long and two feet four inches wide, with floral patterns or the eight trigrams embroidered in the middle, but rarely with words embroidered. The "butterfly wings" on both sides are nine feet long and one foot two inches wide. This kind of sling is called "La" in Zhuang language. After the founding of the People's Republic of China, this kind of sling gradually became smaller in size, and some slings are called "La" in Zhuang language. After the founding of the People's Republic of China, this kind of sling gradually became smaller in size, and some slings were embroidered with words such as "safe in and out" and "happy and happy" on the body, replacing the original patterns. Both men and women wear cloth shoes. Middle-aged women like to wear cat-ear cloth shoes made by themselves when working in the mountains. They are commonly known as shoe cats. They are shaped like straw sandals, with ears and heels. The shoe ears and heels are strung together with a flat gauze ribbon, and the tightness can be adjusted at will.