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Bracelet16.1/2642

TOTEMS TO TURQUOISE (AMNH, NEW YORK, NY, USA, 2004)

Culture
Kwakwaka'wakw: Kwakwakawakw
Material
silver metal and garnet stone ?
Made in
British Columbia, Canada
Holding Institution
American Museum of Natural History
View Item Record
Garnet Crystal, 2 Pieces60/3427
P IP E, Spirit With Frog19/689

ART OF THE NATIVE NORTH AMERICANS (DE NIEUWE KERK AMSTERDAM, AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS, 2012)

Culture
Tlingit: Wrangell
Material
wood, metal, abalone shell, garnet stone and bead
Made in
Wrangell, Wrangell Island, Alaska, USA
Holding Institution
American Museum of Natural History
View Item Record
Garter50.67.37b

This garter is loom woven probably without the use of a heddle. It is made with garnet and white pony beads on a warp of black and green with thread wefts. The beads are composed in a geometric pattern of rectangles and diagonal lines, opposed as chevrons. See other garters, 50.67 a,c,d.shown in additional photogrpahs.

Culture
Chippewa
Material
yarn, garnet bead and pony bead
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
View Item Record
Garter50.67.37a

This garter is loom woven (probably made without the use of a heddle). It is made with white and garnet pony beads on a warp of green yarn and has thread welfts. The beads are composed in a geometric pattern of rectangles and diagonal lines, opposed as chevrons. See other garters 50.67.b,c,d.shown in additional photogrpahs.

Culture
Chippewa
Material
yarn, garnet bead and pony bead
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
View Item Record
Chief's War Shirt50.67.4

This elaborate shirt is decorated with beads and quillwork executed in several techniques. The bib has a heart and two flower sprays in red, green, and blue porcupine quills. The top edge is decorated with blue pony beads in a two-bead edging technique: red garnet beads were applied along the sides with the same technique. An inner broken line border of small red and black seed beads are also sewn on the bib. Two"rays" or "spokes". The inner ring, now grey, is surrounded by a ring of light blue which is then encircled by a red ring. The radiant rays are filled with areas quilled in pale yellow, light blue, and orange. Each entire rosette is encircled at the seam by large blue pony beads. The shoulder seam "coverings" were finely woven on a loom, but are now very deteriorated. A geometric pattern of red and blue "Xs", interspersed with red and blue diamonds are edged with small squares in red, black, and blue. The shoulder strips are checkered, quilled with three lines of colored squares in orange, blue, purple, black, yellow and white and finished along the sides with a zigzag pattern. The seam ornaments and shoulder strips are both edged with a single line of the blue pony beads. Tabs along each side and along the sleeves have pierced decoration. The "cuffs" are ornamented with two lines of blue pony beads. First, a single line and then a double line closer to the opening.The side seams and sleeves have long fringes, but very tiny fringes at the wrist, with every other one wrapped with orange quills. The comparitively simple decoration and unwrapped fringe are possibly due to the fact the shirt produced exclusively for sale and so rated less decoration. See Jarvis report in Arts of Americas' files.

Culture
Red River Metis, Yanktonai, Nakota and Sioux
Material
buckskin, porcupine quill, garnet bead, pony bead, seed bead and thread
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
View Item Record