Description
During tricana's heyday, a tricana girl would typically wear a shawl, an apron, a skirt, a handkerchief and glossy high-heeled slippers. They were thought of as Povoan beauty icons. The author José de Azevedo, referring to their peculiar way of walking and dressing, called tricanas common people with the mannerisms of royalty. Even though the fashion was based on traditional fishers' clothing, the Tricanas were generally from a blue collar background, often daughters of shoemakers, carpenters or similar craftsmen, while many worked as tailors themselves. They applied their knowledge derived from their background in fashion-related industries to their own dressing style.Color code
During parades, tricanas from the six traditional quarters wear dresses in their neighborhood colors.History
The tricana style's heyday was between the 1920s and the 1960s, when it had a strong impact both within Póvoa de Varzim and on outsiders visiting the city. Tricana costumes were mainstream fashion amongst middle class teenagers until the appearance of ready-to-wear clothing in the 1970s. As younger people adopted more modern international fashions, tricana poveira now only appears in urban folklore groups and parades. Nowadays, tricana costumes can be quite expensive depending on the preferences of the tricana girl and the materials used. Still kept as a strong tradition, tricana girls during ''Rusgas de São Pedro'' (Saint Peter Parades), play a big part in the city's festivities on June 28 and 29. ''Tricanas do Cidral'' (from Bairro da Matriz quarter), the first folklore group based on the tricana style, appeared as early as 1920. ''Tricanas da Lapa'' (from Bairro Sul quarter) banded together in 1952, ''Rancho Estrela do Norte'' in 1954 and the regional ''Tricanas Poveiras'' in 1993. Leões da Lapa F.C., the city's south quarter association, has a Miss Tricana contest.References
; Notes ; Bibliography * {{Póvoa de Varzim Culture in Póvoa de Varzim Dresses Folk costumes Portuguese clothing