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Elderly Navajo Woman Weaving a Traditional Blanket or Rug on an Authentic Native American Loom in the Desert at Dusk near the Monument Valley Tribal Park in Northern Arizona
Woman hand sewing a quilt from above
Indian man weaving durries. The durry (Rug) is weaved out of cotton or wool. The geometric designs are produced by tapestry technique which is a slow process using separate bobbins or butterflies for each colour across the width interlocking with the adjacent coloured yarn.  This old fashined form of weaving is very popular in Rajasthan, specially in Salawas village near Jodhpur.
San Cristobal de Las Casas, Mexico - aug 18, 1998: a woman makes traditional Chiapas fabrics by hand using a simple and small loom
overhead view on vietnamese senior woman weaving bamboo mats, sitting on the floor
Man in a traditional workshop weaving a colorful carpet on a loom, Oaxaca, Mexico 2022
A female Indigenous Navajo small business owner at work in her jewelry shop.
A Navajo Grandmother Teaching Her Teenage Granddaughter How To Weave a traditional blanket On A Loom in a Navajo Hogan in Monument Valley, UT wearing traditional clothing
Blankets in traditional indigenous  style create layers on the wall at market in Santa Fe
A Native American Woman's Hands (Navajo) Point to Designs on a Navajo Blanket
Chiang Mai, Thailand - April 7, 2023: A Thai weaver weaving silk in Chiang Mai, the largest city in northern Thailand, the capital of Chiang Mai province and the second largest city in Thailand.
Pattern Red, Orange, White, Green, Black, and blue Diamond Blanket/ Rug - Navajo Artist, made about 1885 of cotton and wool.
Indigenous senior woman making crafts
Background photo of multi-colored patterned blankets.
Experiential Travel Around South Sulawesi Indonesia Learning Making Handmade Tenun Woven  Cloth
Navajo woven wool rug design. The Navajo stained their yarns for fabrics using natural items from the surroundings - beige from corn silk, tan from brown onion skin, maroon from Juniper bark, amber from Juniper Mistletoe, olive-yellow from sagebrush, gray from Indian Paintbrush, brown from the Gambel Oak, dark green from red onion skin, lavender from Holly berries, dusty orange from canaigre root - just a few of the earthtone colors produced for coloring yarns and other items. Arizona, 2014.
Floor mats are a practical addition to any home, providing comfort, protection, and style.
A Navajo Grandmother Teaching Her Teenage Granddaughter How To Weave a traditional blanket On A Loom in a Navajo Hogan in Monument Valley, UT wearing traditional clothing
a beautiful and colored Traditional handmade Turkish Carpet/ Kilim
Nazca or Nasca is an archaeological culture of Ancient Peru that developed in the department of Ica, around the 1st to 18th centuries. Textile art flourished from the development in the time of the Paracas. The Nazca were heirs of the Paracas Necropolis in what refers to the technique for the production of very fine cloaks or fabrics.
Santa Catarina Palopó, Solalá, Guatemala - October 06 2019: Mayan woman is selling and weaving tablecloths with her backstrap loom on a street in Santa Catarina Polopó.
A female Indigenous Navajo small business owner at work in her jewelry shop.
Indian man weaving durries. The durry (Rug) is weaved out of cotton or wool. The geometric designs are produced by tapestry technique which is a slow process using separate bobbins or butterflies for each colour across the width interlocking with the adjacent coloured yarn.  This old fashined form of weaving is very popular in Rajasthan, specially in Salawas village near Jodhpur.
Photo taken in Cusco, Peru
Indigenous beadwork.
A Navajo Grandmother Teaching Her Teenage Granddaughter How To Weave a traditional blanket On A Loom in a Navajo Hogan in Monument Valley, UT wearing traditional clothing
Navajo woven wool blanket rug design. The Navajo stained their yarns for fabrics using natural items from the surroundings - beige from corn silk, tan from brown onion skin, maroon from Juniper bark, amber from Juniper Mistletoe, olive-yellow from sagebrush, gray from Indian Paintbrush, brown from the Gambel Oak, dark green from red onion skin, lavender from Holly berries, dusty orange from canaigre root - just a few of the earthtone colors produced for coloring yarns and other items. Arizona, 2014.
The Paracas textiles were found at a necropolis in Peru  The necropolis held 420 bodies who had been mummified and wrapped in embroidered textiles of the Paracas culture in 200-300 BCE
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