From southern Mexico to northern Colombia, palm fronds, wild pineapple fibers, agave fibers, wild bamboo and cane have been woven into bags, baskets, mats, hats, and brooms for as long as anyone can remember. These items carry great historical and cultural value to many Indigenous people including the Otomi (Mexico), Maya (Mexico and Guatemala), Lenca (Honduras), Ngobe-Bugle (Panama), Embera (Panama and Columbia), plus the Guane and Zunu (Columbia) providing a “sense of place” for those who harvest, prepare, weave, and use or sell plant material woven items in each of their unique environments. Spanish colonization, civil wars, modern politics, tourism, and globalization are among events that have influenced production of these items in m...
Weaving has been an ongoing traditional folk art in northern New Mexico for hundreds of years. There...
Many weavers living near Cuzco, Peru are reviving the use of natural dyes in their traditional texti...
Indigenous Andeans and the Spanish chroniclers in the early colonial era wrote about the pre-Hispani...
From southern Mexico to northern Colombia, palm fronds, wild pineapple fibers, agave fibers, wild ba...
Quechua Weavings as living art in the Andes today represent the contemporary textiles as result of t...
In Aymara culture, textiles have played a fundamental role as highly valued community possessions an...
In recent years in Perú, a number of initiatives have been independently developed by collective gro...
Morrales or net bags are an important man’s accessory in rural Guatemala, and many are made from mag...
When the Spanish arrived in the Andes, they encountered a rich textile production industry. The colo...
Among our studies of ancient Peruvian textiles created in tapestry technique, we have come across so...
This study deals with the history of New Mexico as it affects the crafts. It covers the general hist...
San Andres Chicahuaxtla is a Trique-speaking village in the mountains of the southern Mexican state ...
Although pre-historic Andean textile artists explored almost every textile structure ever invented, ...
The development of rich and complex Andean textile traditions spanned millennia, in concert with the...
Textile arts in the Andean region have long been experiencing a decline. The success of the Jalq\u27...
Weaving has been an ongoing traditional folk art in northern New Mexico for hundreds of years. There...
Many weavers living near Cuzco, Peru are reviving the use of natural dyes in their traditional texti...
Indigenous Andeans and the Spanish chroniclers in the early colonial era wrote about the pre-Hispani...
From southern Mexico to northern Colombia, palm fronds, wild pineapple fibers, agave fibers, wild ba...
Quechua Weavings as living art in the Andes today represent the contemporary textiles as result of t...
In Aymara culture, textiles have played a fundamental role as highly valued community possessions an...
In recent years in Perú, a number of initiatives have been independently developed by collective gro...
Morrales or net bags are an important man’s accessory in rural Guatemala, and many are made from mag...
When the Spanish arrived in the Andes, they encountered a rich textile production industry. The colo...
Among our studies of ancient Peruvian textiles created in tapestry technique, we have come across so...
This study deals with the history of New Mexico as it affects the crafts. It covers the general hist...
San Andres Chicahuaxtla is a Trique-speaking village in the mountains of the southern Mexican state ...
Although pre-historic Andean textile artists explored almost every textile structure ever invented, ...
The development of rich and complex Andean textile traditions spanned millennia, in concert with the...
Textile arts in the Andean region have long been experiencing a decline. The success of the Jalq\u27...
Weaving has been an ongoing traditional folk art in northern New Mexico for hundreds of years. There...
Many weavers living near Cuzco, Peru are reviving the use of natural dyes in their traditional texti...
Indigenous Andeans and the Spanish chroniclers in the early colonial era wrote about the pre-Hispani...