bag, bandolier
bag, bandolier
bag, bandolier
Repetative motif with eight design units, four on each side. Attributed to the Delaware.
Attributed to the Delaware in museum record.
On site observation and PMAE website record.
Read More About This Relative
common stroud (red); green stroud; silk ribbon (green); printed cotton cloth (two kinds: blue calico and blue and pink floral); sz. 13 seed beads (multicolored); wool yarn (red); tin cones.
There is red wool yarn used in place of red dyed hair inside tin cones. The pouch is lined with calico; front of pouch is red stroud almost completely covered with applique beadwork (sewn directly on the cloth, not sewn through lining); back of pouch is green stroud. No evidence of beadwork threads on back of strap either.
Wild design! (DP). Repetative motif with eight design units, four on each side. All 8 units are the same but colors are different. Space in between units is also filled with color.
Found in PMAE records
Provenance
About This GRASAC Record
Cory Willmott, Alan Corbiere, Adriana Greci Green and David Penney conducted research on site at the Peabody Museum for Archaeology and Ethnology in July 2007 with help from Susan Haskell and Patricia Capone of the PMAE. Cory Willmott's research was funded by a grant from the American Philosophical Society. Al Corbiere was supported through Ruth Phillips's SSHRC Canada Research Chair Funding. An internal grant from Southern Illinois University Edwardsville provided Cory with an RA, Ceara Horsley, for 2009 and 2010 to work on GRASAC data entry. (CW & CH)