The juxtaposition of "turban" and "kalça" is not accidental. Over the last five years, a significant subculture has emerged on social media—particularly Twitter and Instagram—where Muslim women and modest fashion influencers celebrate body shapes, including hips and curves, without abandoning religious dress codes.
This movement challenges two stereotypes:
On Turkish Twitter, hashtags like #tesettürgüzellik (hijab beauty), #helalkalça (halal hip), and #modestfashion regularly accompany photos of women wearing long skirts, wide trousers, or layered dresses that still highlight silhouette. Yandex Görsel, often less aggressively moderated than Google’s SafeSearch, becomes a repository for such images—especially those pinned from Twitter. The juxtaposition of "turban" and "kalça" is not accidental
Turkish fitness accounts sharing "before/after" shots of lower body workouts, with the model wearing modest activewear (long tops over leggings, headscarf pinned securely). Kalça progress photos are common in this niche.
The subject line mentions "297 images found." This indicates a successful query match. Here is what this number represents: On Turkish Twitter
By appending "lifestyle and entertainment," the searcher or original content curator signals that these images are not pornographic, not medical, and not overtly sexual—despite the reference to "kalça." They aim to classify the content under acceptable categories for blogs, fashion magazines, or social media aggregators.
However, content moderators on Twitter and Yandex sometimes disagree. A photo that one person calls "lifestyle fashion" might be flagged as "suggestive" by automated systems. This tension explains why users turn to Yandex Görsel—it offers less aggressive filtering, preserving the gray area where modest body confidence lives online. hashtags like #tesettürgüzellik (hijab beauty)
Yandex’s image search algorithm: