Baby Carrier
Item number A8144 from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
Item number A8144 from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
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Basketry tan cradle of simple interlocking coiled work (bifurcated stitches) with parallel slat base construction and a flat braid (three strand) rim with looped braiding at the head end. Decorated with partial beading: four slat rows of beading near the front with four beaded rows per slat. Design features a series of chevron figures each with four beaded rows in red or black cherry bark alternating with similar cat-tail grass bands. Also five groups of four beaded pyramid forms each in red cherry cotton print material for fastenings.
Baby carrier. Andrea Laforet of the Canadian Museum of Civilization suggests that basketry cradles came into use in the mid to late 1800s.
basketry; children
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Baby carrier. Andrea Laforet of the Canadian Museum of Civilization suggests that basketry cradles came into use in the mid to late 1800s.
basketry; children
Basketry tan cradle of simple interlocking coiled work (bifurcated stitches) with parallel slat base construction and a flat braid (three strand) rim with looped braiding at the head end. Decorated with partial beading: four slat rows of beading near the front with four beaded rows per slat. Design features a series of chevron figures each with four beaded rows in red or black cherry bark alternating with similar cat-tail grass bands. Also five groups of four beaded pyramid forms each in red cherry cotton print material for fastenings.
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