Comb
Item number C1415 from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
Item number C1415 from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
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Comb with a handle which tapers to a straight edge. The main design along the handle is woven with red and natural-coloured weave in between radial bands of dark brown wood along the lower portion and with natural-coloured and dark brown weave along the upper portion. Forty long teeth fan outward radially. The teeth are secured by a natural-coloured weave between each tooth.
The distinctive, finely plaited faa, or comb, made by the Kwaio women of Malaita Island are traded throughout the Solomon Islands. They are worn by men, often together with similarly plaited ear sticks. Today, these combs are still being made as a source of cash income.
The teeth of the faa are made from split sections of the core of tree ferns. The yellow and red pigments used to dye the orchid vine in the plaiting are derived from the bark and root of the Morinda plant, commonly known as noni.
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The distinctive, finely plaited faa, or comb, made by the Kwaio women of Malaita Island are traded throughout the Solomon Islands. They are worn by men, often together with similarly plaited ear sticks. Today, these combs are still being made as a source of cash income.
Comb with a handle which tapers to a straight edge. The main design along the handle is woven with red and natural-coloured weave in between radial bands of dark brown wood along the lower portion and with natural-coloured and dark brown weave along the upper portion. Forty long teeth fan outward radially. The teeth are secured by a natural-coloured weave between each tooth.
The teeth of the faa are made from split sections of the core of tree ferns. The yellow and red pigments used to dye the orchid vine in the plaiting are derived from the bark and root of the Morinda plant, commonly known as noni.
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