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Klukwan Yadi2014-49/2

The wool cloth is black, blue, yellow, and white. The cotton cloth is blue and green. The bead is abalone, blue, yellow, glass, and mother-of-pearl.

Culture
Euro-American
Material
wool cloth, cotton cloth, bead, abalone shell, glass and mother of pearl shell
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
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Apron2004-2/103

'Spirit of the Ancestors' - This apron is the only contemporary Chilkat style weaving in the Burke's collection, and was woven by the only male Native weaver known to use this technique. Many believe that Tsimshian women originated this complex technique of weaving in the late 18th or early 19th centuries. This apron depicts a Raven with its wings outstretched.

Culture
Tsimshian
Material
wool, fur, deer hoof, copper ore metal, leather, wood, sinew and cloth
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
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Chilkat Robe | Naaxiin | Naaxhein | Child's1999-97/210
Tunic | Chilkat Robe | Naaxiin | Naaxhein | Fragment2.5E1542
Chilkat Robe | Naaxhein1-210
Chilkat Tunic | Naaxhein kudas'1-631

Tlingit weavers also used their skills to produce articles of ceremonial dress other than dancing blankets. Among these were aprons, leggings, and a very few rare pouches, cartridge boxes, and shamans' hats. The largest and most spectacular of these ceremonial articles, however, was the tunic, either sleeved or sleeveless. Probably derived from a painted dance tunic, or perhaps an armor shirt, it was modified and conventionalized by the weaving process. (Holm, Spirit and Ancestor, 1987)

Culture
Tlingit: Chilkat
Material
mountain goat wool and yellow cedar bark
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
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Chilkat Leggings | Naaxhein1954
Chilkat Robe | Naaxiin | Naaxhein1-2172
Chilkat Robe | Naaxiin | Naaxhein1-1587

No more royal robe ever draped a king than the dancing blanket of the northern Northwest Coast, universally named the Chilkat blanket, after the Tlingit tribe whose weavers specialized in its making in the nineteenth century. Its characteristic five-sided form, richly fringed, with striking black and yellow bands bordering a complex tapestry of eyes, fins, or feathers, is instantly recognizable. There are dozens of Chilkat blanket patterns. The most common are those called diving whale, most of which are divided into three distinct panels, the central one depicting the whale. (Holm, Spirit and Ancestor, 1987)

Culture
Northwest Coast
Material
mountain goat wool, yellow cedar bark and dye
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
View Item Record
Chilkat Robe | Naaxiin | Naaxhein9511