Rawhide Lamp Shades & Southwest Decor Home Page
Rawhide Lamp Shades
Southwest Decor -Zapotec Rugs -Table Runners -Bedspreads -Pillows -Ladders -Bowls -Lamps
Southwestern Rugs, Zapotec Rugs, Western Tapestries
Zapotec Rugs, Table Runners, Place Mats
Southwestern Lamps -Wrought Iron Lamps -Aspen Log Lamps -Antler Lamps
Custom Rawhide Lamp Shades
Leather Lamp Shades
Painted Leather & Rawhide Lamp Shades
Native American Drums -Indian Hand Drums -Pow Wow Drums -Painted Drums
Native American -Rattles -Prayer Fans -Pipes -Bags -Artifacts -Bows -Arrows -Knives
Native American Flutes By Jonah Thompson
Indian Baskets
Native American Pottery, Tarahumara Indian, Pueblo, Tigua, Mata Ortiz, Talavera
American Indian Jewelry
Southwestern Purses, Bags & Totes
Rustic Furniture
Articles & Resources
Southwest Decor Guide
New Arrivals, Clearances & Closeouts

Wholesale
Free Southwestern Decor Guide & Buyers Club
Affiliate Program - Make Money Online
Related Websites - Add Your URL
International Shipping Outside Continental US
Shipping | Return Policy | Warranties
Contact Us
Our Ebay Auctions
FAQ's
Site Index
Customer Service
Shopping Cart
Home > Articles & Resources > Navajo Rug & Blanket Weavers > Navajo Weavers page 1 - The Art of Navajo Weaving

Navajo Weavers page 1 - The Art of Navajo Weaving

Navajo Weavers page 1 - The Art of Navajo Weaving

The art of weaving, as it exists among the Navajo Indians of New Mexico and Arizona, possesses points of great interest to the student of ethnography. It is of aboriginal origin; and while European art has undoubtedly modified it, the extent and nature of the foreign influence is easily traced. It is by no means certain, still there are many reasons for supposing, that the Navajos learned their craft from the Pueblo Indians, and that, too, since the advent of the Spaniards; yet the pupils, if such they be, far excel their masters to-day in the beauty and quality of their work. It may be safely stated that with no native tribe in America, north of the Mexican boundary, has the art of weaving been carried to greater perfection than among the Navajos, while with none in the entire continent is it less Europeanized. As in language, habits, and opinions, so in arts, the Navajos have been less influenced than their sedentary neighbors of the pueblos by the civilization of the Old World.

The superiority of the Navajo to the Pueblo work results not only from a constant advance of the weaver's art among the former, but from a constant deterioration of it among the latter. The chief cause of this deterioration is that the Pueblos find it more remunerative to buy, at least the finer serapes, from the Navajos, and give their time to other pursuits, than to manufacture for themselves; they are nearer the white settlements and can get better prices for their produce; they give more attention to agriculture; they have within their country, mines of turquoise which the Navajos prize, and they have no trouble in procuring whisky, which some of the Navajos prize even more than gems. Consequently, while the wilder Indian has incentives to improve his art, the more advanced has many temptations to abandon it altogether. In some pueblos the skill of the loom has been almost forgotten. A growing fondness for European clothing has also had its influence, no doubt.

Cotton, which grows well in New Mexico and Arizona, the tough fibers of yucca leaves and the fibers of other plants, the hair of different quadrupeds, and the down of birds furnished in prehistoric days the materials of textile fabrics in this country. While some of the Pueblos still weave their native cotton to a slight extent, the Navajos grow no cotton and spin nothing but the wool of the domestic sheep, which animal is, of course, of Spanish introduction, and of which the Navajos have vast herds.

The wool is not washed until it is sheared. At the present time it is combed with hand cards purchased from the Americans. In spinning, the simplest form of the spindle—a slender stick thrust through the center of a round wooden disk—is used. The Mexicans on the Rio Grande use spinning-wheels, and although the Navajos have often seen these wheels, have had abundant opportunities for buying and stealing them, and possess, I think, sufficient ingenuity to make them, they have never abandoned the rude implement of their ancestors. The Navajo method of handling the spindle is different from that of the people of Zuñi.

They still employ to a great extent their native dyes: of yellow, reddish, and black. There is good evidence that they formerly had a blue dye; but indigo, originally introduced, I think, by the Mexicans, has superseded this. If they, in former days, had a native blue and a native yellow, they must also, of course, have had a green, and they now make green of their native yellow and indigo, the latter being the only imported dye-stuff I have ever seen in use among them. Besides the hues above indicated, this people have had, ever since the introduction of sheep, wool of three different natural colors—white, rusty black, and gray—so they had always a fair range of tints with which to execute their artistic designs.

The brilliant red figures in their finer blankets were, a few years ago, made entirely of bayeta, and this material is still largely used. Bayeta is a bright scarlet cloth with a long nap, much finer in appearance than the scarlet strouding which forms such an important article in the Indian trade of the North. It was originally brought to the Navajo country from Mexico, but is now supplied to the trade from our eastern cities. The Indians ravel it and use the weft. While many handsome blankets are still made only of the colors and material above described, American yarn has lately become very popular among the Navajos, and many fine blankets are now made wholly, or in part, of Germantown wool.

The black dye mentioned above is made of the twigs and leaves of the aromatic sumac (Rhus aromatica), a native yellow ocher, and the gum of the piñon (Pinus edulis). The process of preparing it is as follows: They put into a pot of water some of the leaves of the sumac, and as many of the branchlets as can be crowded in without much breaking or crushing, and the water is allowed to boil for five or six hours until a strong decoction is made. While the water is boiling they attend to other parts of the process. The ocher is reduced to a fine powder between two stones and then slowly roasted over the fire in an earthen or metal vessel until it assumes a light-brown color; it is then taken from the fire and combined with about an equal quantity in size of piñon gum; again the mixture is put on the fire and constantly stirred.

At first the gum melts and the whole mass assumes a mushy consistency; but as the roasting progresses it gradually becomes drier and darker until it is at last reduced to a fine black powder. This is removed from the fire, and when it has cooled somewhat it is thrown into the decoction of sumac, with which it instantly forms a rich, blue-black fluid. This dye is essentially an ink, the tannic acid of the sumac combining with the sesquioxide of iron in the roasted ocher, the whole enriched by the carbon of the calcined gum.

There are, the Indians tell me, three different processes for dyeing yellow; two of these I have witnessed. The first process is thus conducted: The flowering tops of Bigelovia graveolens are boiled for about six hours until a decoction of deep yellow color is produced. When the dyer thinks the decoction strong enough, she heats over the fire in a pan or earthen vessel some native almogen (an impure native alum), until it is reduced to a somewhat pasty consistency; this she adds gradually to the decoction and then puts the wool in the dye to boil.

From time to time a portion of the wool is taken out and inspected until (in about half an hour from the time it is first immersed) it is seen to have assumed the proper color. The work is then done. The tint produced is nearly that of lemon yellow. In the second process they use the large, fleshy root of a plant which, as I have never yet seen it in fruit or flower, I am unable to determine. The fresh root is crushed to a soft paste on the metate, and, for a mordant, the almogen is added while the grinding is going on. The cold paste is then rubbed between the hands into the wool. If the wool does not seem to take the color readily a little water is dashed on the mixture of wool and paste, and the whole is very slightly warmed. The entire process does not occupy over an hour and the result is a color much like that now known as "old gold."

The reddish dye is made of the bark of Alnus incana var. virescens (Watson) and the bark of the root of Cercocarpus parvifolius; the mordant being fine juniper ashes. On buckskin this makes a brilliant tan-color; but applied to wool it produces a much paler tint. Copyright Mission Del Rey



Related Items:
  • Navajo Weavers page 1 - The Art of Navajo Weaving
  • Navajo Weavers page 2 - The Blanket / Rug Loom
  • Navajo Weavers page 3 - Woven Rugs & Blankets
  • Navajo Weavers page 4 - Traditional Diagonal Rug Patterns
  • Navajo Weavers page 5- Traditional Blanket & Rug Designs
  • Navajo Weavers page 6 - Differences of the Navajo and Zuni
  • Yei Dancers Tapestry Rug 30"x40"
  • Hand Woven Indian Style Rug -20x40 Navajo Yei
  • Wool Navajo Style Tapestry -27x44 Yei Dancer
  • Southwest Wool Floor Rug /Tapestry -Bluebird Dancers 32x64
  • Southwest Table-Floor Rug Wool 20x40 (40205)
  • Southwestern Table or Area Rug Wool 20x40 (40373)
  • Southwest Wool Table Runner - Rug 20x40 (40320a)
  • Southwest Woven Table Centerpiece Rug 20x40
  • Western Woven Wool Rug-Tapestry 20x40 (40437)
  • Southwest Hand Woven Wool Rug - Wall Hanging 20"x40" (40110a)
  • Western Hand Woven Wool Area-Table Rug 20"x40" (40331)
  • Southwest Wool Area Rug-Table-Tapestry 20x40 (40406)
  • Southwest Hand Woven Wool Rug 32"x64" (64110a)
  • Western Saddle Blanket Wool Rug 32"x64" (64331)
  • Southwestern Hand Woven Wool Rug 32"x64" (64398)
  • Wool Southwest Floor Rug 32x64 (64373)
  • Wool Western Floor Rug 32x64
  • Wool Southwestern Floor Rug 32x64 (64128-3)
  • Western Wool Rug 32x64
  • Southwest Wool Floor Runner Rug 30x96 (8417)
  • Western Wool Floor Runner Rug 30x96 (96112)
  • Southwestern Wool Floor Runner Rug 30x96 (96128-3)
  • Zapotec Indian Wool Rug 30"x60" (1)
  • Zapotec Indian Wool Area Rug 30x60 (ZR2)




  • Southwest Decor & Western Home Accents


    pad
    New Arrivals - Rawhide Shades, Drums & More
    pad
    Rawhide Lamp Shades
    pad
    Leather Lamp Shades -Painted Lampshades
    pad
    Painted Leather & Rawhide Lamp Shades
    pad
    Chandelier Lamp Shades
    New Arrivals - Rawhide Shades, Drums & More
    pad
    pad
    Rawhide Lamp Shades
    pad
    pad
    Leather Lamp Shades -Painted Lampshades
    pad
    pad
    Painted Leather & Rawhide Lamp Shades
    pad
    pad
    Chandelier Lamp Shades
    pad
    pad
    pad
    Custom Rawhide Lamp Shades
    pad
    Native American Drums -Indian Hand Drums -Pow Wow Drums -Painted Drums
    pad
    Native American Hand Drums
    pad
    Native American Painted Drums
    pad
    Native American Shaman Drums
    Custom Rawhide Lamp Shades
    pad
    pad
    Native American Drums -Indian Hand Drums -Pow Wow Drums -Painted Drums
    pad
    pad
    Native American Hand Drums
    pad
    pad
    Native American Painted Drums
    pad
    pad
    Native American Shaman Drums
    pad
    pad
    pad
    Native American Indian Pow Wow Drums
    pad
    Native American Indian Pedestal Floor Drums, Log Drums & Tables
    pad
    Antler Lamps Sconces & Chandeliers with Rawhide Lamp Shades
    pad
     Wrought Iron Western Lamps with Rawhide Lamp Shades
    pad
    Southwest Indian Pottery Lamps & Rawhide Lamp Shades
    Native American Indian Pow Wow Drums
    pad
    pad
    Native American Indian Pedestal Floor Drums, Log Drums & Tables
    pad
    pad
    Antler Lamps Sconces & Chandeliers with Rawhide Lamp Shades
    pad
    pad
    Wrought Iron Western Lamps with Rawhide Lamp Shades
    pad
    pad
    Southwest Indian Pottery Lamps & Rawhide Lamp Shades
    pad
    pad
    pad
    Rustic Pueblo Indian Style Wooden Kiva Ladders
    pad
    Western Pictoral & Rug Tapestries
    pad
    Southwest Pillow Covers & Western Pillows
    pad
    Southwest Table Runners & Place Mats
    pad
    Southwest Blankets, Western Bedspreads Bedding & Throws
    Rustic Pueblo Indian Style Wooden Kiva Ladders
    pad
    pad
    Western Pictoral & Rug Tapestries
    pad
    pad
    Southwest Pillow Covers & Western Pillows
    pad
    pad
    Southwest Table Runners & Place Mats
    pad
    pad
    Southwest Blankets, Western Bedspreads Bedding & Throws
    pad
    pad
    pad
    Native American Indian Pottery, Tarahumara Pueblo, Mata Ortiz
    pad
    Mata Ortiz Pottery Painted Pottery
    pad
    Tigua Indian Pottery & Drum Painting
    pad
    Indian Baskets
    pad
    Indian Wooden Dough Bowls
    Native American Indian Pottery, Tarahumara Pueblo, Mata Ortiz
    pad
    pad
    Mata Ortiz Pottery Painted Pottery
    pad
    pad
    Tigua Indian Pottery & Drum Painting
    pad
    pad
    Indian Baskets
    pad
    pad
    Indian Wooden Dough Bowls
    pad
    pad
    pad
    Native American -Rattles -Prayer Fans -Pipes -Bags -Artifacts -Bows -Arrows -Knives
    pad
    Native American Flutes
    pad
    Southwest & Western Purses, Bags,Totes, Apparel
    pad
    American Indian Jewelry | Purses & Apparel
    pad
    Southwest & Western Door Mats
    Native American -Rattles -Prayer Fans -Pipes -Bags -Artifacts -Bows -Arrows -Knives
    pad
    pad
    Native American Flutes
    pad
    pad
    Southwest & Western Purses, Bags,Totes, Apparel
    pad
    pad
    American Indian Jewelry | Purses & Apparel
    pad
    pad
    Southwest & Western Door Mats
    pad
    pad
    pad
    Southwest Wall Hangings & Western Tapestries
    pad
    Painted Steer Skulls
    pad
    Painted Wooden Bowls
    pad
    Southwestern Rugs, Zapotec Rugs, Western Tapestries
    pad
    Painted Milk Cans
    Southwest Wall Hangings & Western Tapestries
    pad
    pad
    Painted Steer Skulls
    pad
    pad
    Painted Wooden Bowls
    pad
    pad
    Southwestern Rugs, Zapotec Rugs, Western Tapestries
    pad
    pad
    Painted Milk Cans
    pad
    pad
    pad
    Native American Crosses
    pad
    Natural & Painted Hides, Furs, Skins
    pad
    Painted Toilet Seats
    pad
    Western Candle Holders & Luminaria
    pad
    Western Hat, Coat Racks, Plaques & Wall Decor
    Native American Crosses
    pad
    pad
    Natural & Painted Hides, Furs, Skins
    pad
    pad
    Painted Toilet Seats
    pad
    pad
    Western Candle Holders & Luminaria
    pad
    pad
    Western Hat, Coat Racks, Plaques & Wall Decor
    pad
    pad



    Mission Del Rey is preserving the Tarahumara Indians , North America's most primitive people through the development of traditional skills. Products are imported to the USA, not produced by Native Americans except where noted. (learn more) Rustic lamps and shades rawhide lampshades and Indian drums, rugs, pottery and dough bowls are great accents for rustic southwest decor, western country cabin or lodge style.
    We wholesale rawhide lamp shades wholesale Indian drums for resale. Visit our Southwest Decor Blog. RSS for Mission Del Rey

    Rawhide Lamp Shades HOME   |  ABOUT  |   CONTACT US  |   SITE MAP  |  WHOLESALE INFO |  WHOLESALE SIGN-IN

    Mission Del Rey
    2200 N. Yarbrough Ste. B.
    El Paso, TX 79925
    Fast answer email: sales@missiondelrey.com
    Contact Us


    Southwestern Lighting  |   Custom-made Lamp Shades   |  Leather Lampshades
    Chandelier Lamp Shades  |  Native American Indian Drums  |   Southwestern lamps
    Indian Pottery  |  Wooden Dough Bowls  |  Rawhide Lamp Shades

    © 2007 Copyright www.missiondelrey.com Southwest Decor & Rawhide Lamp Shades