Garters
Garters
Garters
18th century garters with black and yellow zigzag motif on a red background. Garters are constructed from quills and skin thongs using the netted technique. Fringes are decorated with tuffs of deer hair (probably) and metal cones. Initially collected by Charles Alston Messiter, these garters were purchased by the Canadian Museum of Civilization at auction and are now part of its permeant collection.
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Porcupine quills (coloured red, yellow, and black),tanned animal hide, sinew, dyed animal hair (probably deer), metal cones.
These garters were made using the netted quillwork tecnique (flattened porcupine quills are wrapped around paired skin thongs. The thongs are then warpped in atlternating pairs to form a lattice). The ends of the netted quills are secured with a row of sinew twineing, the ends of the thongs are left long to form a free-hanging fringe (10 fringes on each end). The fringe thongs are wroapped in pairs with white, black, and red quills. Seven of these are finished with a tuft of dyed red hair(probably deer) enclosed in a metal cone. The bottom of the gartes have been similarly embellished, yellow and black quill-wrapped sinew tassels have been threaded through the bottom of the netted weave (there are 16 bottom tassels on one garter and 17 onthe other). The ends of these tassels are also wrapped in a metal cone which holds a tuft of the same type of dyed red hair.
The geometric design motif features two parellel black and yellow zigzags on a field of red. Each zigzag is three quills wide and are seperated from each other by three red quills.
Various styles of garters can be seen in many archival paintings, drawings, and photographs. They are worn below the knee over leggings; it is unclear if they are used for keeping the leggings in place or for adornment purposes.
The CMC has given this date range based on materials used and construction techniques, comparative examples confirm that this is an accurate estimate. Furthermore, Charles Alston Messiter (1841 – 1920) collected the garters during one of his trips to North America, which he made in 1862, 1866, and 1874. Therefore it can be confirmed that they were made prior to 1874.
Provenance
Brasser, Theodore. Native American Indian Clothing: an Illustrated History (Richmond Hill: Firefly Books, 2009).
There is a photograph of these garters on page 100. Their current location is listed as "unknown", the image is "courtesy of the Messiter Collection."
About This GRASAC Record
This record was made in conjunction with Ruth Phillips' Indigenous Arts of the Great Lakes Region: Historical Contexts and Cultural Translations class at Carleton University, Fall 2010.