Late 1800 s native american apache indian pictorial woven basket lot.
Native american baskets.
Originally utilitarian native american indian baskets were used for cooking carrying and storage but as with all utilitarian items of.
Here native american baskets were made of materials like willow alder cedar maple beargrass.
Cherokee split oak basket.
The native american basket is perhaps the oldest invention of native american culture.
Cherokee split oak basket.
Southwestern indians hopi and navajo make baskets from tightly coiled sumac or willow and northwest coast indians typically weave with cedar bark swamp grass and spruce root.
As the floors of most tarahumara homes are dirt native baskets help keep personal items organized and clean.
Jicarilla apache lidded basket.
Very fine early native american yavapai or apache basket circa 1900.
Yucca willow cottonwood and.
Fragments of baskets and other weavings are found in the earliest sites of the ancient ones those peoples thought to be the predecessors of today s modern puebloans who left their dwellings and mysterious painted symbols on stone and vanished.
A tarahumara basket may be used to store corn beans or a number of other things.
Brown ash and sweetgrass were typically used in this region.
Native american indian baskets.
Jicarilla apache waste basket.
To use the brown ash entire logs had to be.
Southwest baskets serve many functions in a traditional tarahumara household.