Showing posts with label clothes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label clothes. Show all posts

Monday, March 21, 2016

Native American Art - The Song of the Arrows

Native American Art - The Song of the Arrows



The Song of the Arrows
HIS ADORNMENT
To the casual observer the costume and character of the Indian all look alike. The mind is confused amid a riotous and fantastic display of colours. The fact is that the minor details of Indian dress are an index to Indian character and often tell the story of his position in the tribe, and surely tell the story of his individual conception of the life here, and what he hopes for in the life hereafter, and like the laurel wreath on the brow of the Grecian runner, they spell out for us his exploits and achievements. To the white man all these decorations are construed as a few silly ornaments, the indulgence of a feverish vanity, but they open like a book the life of the Indian. His motive in adornment is to mark individual, tribal, or ceremonial distinction. The use of paint on the face, hair, and body, both in colour and design, generally has reference to individual or clan beliefs, or it indicates relationship, or personal bereavement, or is an act of courtesy. It is always employed in ceremonies
religious and secular, and is an accompaniment of gala dress for the purpose of honouring a guest or to celebrate an occasion. The face of the dead was frequently painted in accordance with tribal or religious symbolism. Paint is also used on the faces of children and adults as a protection from wind and sun. Plucking the hair from the face and body is a part of the daily program. The male Indian never shaves and the beard is a disgrace. A pair of tweezers becomes his razor. Sweet grasses and seeds serve as a perfume. Ear ornaments are a mark of family thrift, wealth or distinction, and indicate honour shown to the wearer by his kindred.
Among the Plains Indians the milk teeth of the elk were the most costly adornments. They were fastened in rows on a woman's tunic and represented the climax of Indian fashion, the garment possessing a value of several hundred dollars. Head bands, armlets, bracelets, belts, necklaces, and garters of metal and seeds and embroidered buckskin were in constant use. They were not only decorative but often symbolic. Archaeological testimony tells of the almost general use of sea shells as necklace ornaments, which found their way into the interior by barter or as ceremonial gifts. The chiefs of the tribe were fond of wearing a disk cut from a conch-shell, and these were also prominent in religious rites, ranking among the modern tribes as did the turquoise among 
the people of the Southwest. A necklace of bear claws marks the man of distinction, and sometimes was worn as an armlet. In the buffalo country the women seldom ornamented their own robes, but embroidered those worn by the men. Sometimes a man painted his robe in accordance with a dream or pictured upon it a yearly record of his own deeds, or the prominent events of the tribe. Among the southern tribes a prayer rug was made on deer skin, both the buffalo and deer skins having been tanned and softened by the use of the brains taken from the skull of the animal. The skins were painted with intricate ornamentation, symbols and prayer thoughts adorning the skin in ceremonial colours; white clouds and white flowers, the sun god, and the curve of the moon with its germ of life, the morning star, and also a symbol of the messengers from the gods. Above it all zigzag lines ran through the blue of the sky to denote the lightning by which the children above sent their decrees to the earth children who roamed the plains.

Monday, October 27, 2014

Cree Indian Tribe Historical Photo Portraits

Cree Indian Tribe Historical Photo Portraits

1920 photograph of a Cree Indian woman

1920s photograph of a Cree Indian man.

Cree Indian girl photographed in a buffalo robe

This is belived to be a Cree Indian dancer in ceremonial clothing

Little is known of the this young Cree Indian

Friday, October 3, 2014

Apache Native American Girls Clothing Photo Gallery

Apache Native American Girls Clothing Photo Gallery

Apache Indian Girl in Traditional Dress. No date on photo

Apache Indian Girl with Traditional Dress.  Photo Circa 1880

Isabelle Perico, Yound Apache Indian Woman. date of photo unknown

Two Apache Indian Girls, Caption reads: Madeline and her Chum Weweta, San Carlos Apache 

Two Apache Indian Girls. The Girl on the left is the granddaughter of Geronimo


Apache Indian Girl Wearing  a Bucksin Dress

Apache Indian Girl, Nalin taken in 1903


Sunday, August 3, 2014

Blackfeet Indian Couples Photo Gallery

Blackfeet Indian Couples Photo Gallery

Two Blackfeet Indians on a horse taken circa 1910

Mr. and Mrs. Left Hand Blackfeet Indian Couple

Blackfeet Indian couple, location and date unknown.

Blackfeet Indian couple, circa 1930. Her name is Far Away Voice.

Mrs.White Wings and Husband circa 1925






Friday, March 28, 2014

Montana Flathead Indians Clothing, Dress and Beadwork

Montana Flathead Indians Clothing, Dress and Beadwork

    The Flathead Indian was known as the "Pretty People" because of their buckskin clothing that was beautifully beaded. They displayed some of the finest craftsmanship in dress and headdress.


Flathead Indian couple on horseback with child. Photo believed to have been taken in Montana but no date.


Two Flathead Indian women showing their beautiful beadwork and dress.


Montana Flathead Indian family showing their buckskin dress with beadwork.


Two Flathead Indian girls on horses that are adorned with beadwork.


Flathead Indian called Flathead taken in 1905 with full regalia of feathers and beadwork


Two Flathead Indian males taken in Montana about 1905. The male of the left has a headdress made of porcupine hair.


A group of Flathead Indian women taken on the reservation in the late 1920s. Each showing their exquisite talent of embroidery and beadwork.


Monday, February 13, 2012

California Indian Picture and Images

California Indian Picture and Images

California Indian Image

California Piute Indian

California Food Stores

California Indian Camp

California Washoe Indians

California Indians at Rancherio

California Indians at Mono Lake

California Indian Group

California Indians Making Food

Temecula Indian Huts of California

California Indian Clothes

Big River California Indian Huts

California Mohave Indians

California Indian Bath Huts

California Indians Summer Huts

Yokut Indian Women from California

Yurok Indian Village in California

California Indian Woman and Child

California Indian Woman

California Maidu Indians Gambling

California Indians Dancing

California Indian Spearing Salmon

California Indians Hunting

California Indian from Sacramento

California Indian Image