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  2. Kente cloth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kente_cloth

    The designs and motifs in kente cloth are traditionally abstract, but some weavers also include words, numbers and symbols in their work. [3] Example messages include adweneasa , which translates as 'I've exhausted my skills', is a highly decorated type of kente with weft -based patterns woven into every available block of plain weave.

  3. African textiles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African_textiles

    Yoruba Woman in Aso oke Ewe Kente. Asante Kente: [8] [9] [10] The Asante were the dominant people of West Africa's Gold Coast, present-day Ghana. Controlling the only source of gold available, the Asante traded with other African states and later with Europeans after contact with the Portuguese in the 15th century. With their wealth and a rich ...

  4. Ghanaian smock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghanaian_smock

    Kente cloth originated in the southern region of Ghana. How it is made. The smock is traditionally made from hand-loomed strips comprising a blend of dyed and undyed ...

  5. Stripweave - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stripweave

    Stripweave is a textile technique in which large numbers of thin strips of cloth are sewn together to produce a finished fabric. Most stripweave is produced in West Africa from handwoven fabric, of which the example best known internationally is the kente cloth of Ghana .

  6. Adanwomase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adanwomase

    Adanwomase is also well known for the traditional Kente cloth weaving. Although there are a variety of oral histories concerning the origins of Kente Cloth, historians and scholars agree that Kente Cloth production is an extension of centuries of strip-weaving in West Africa. Strip-weaving has existed in West Africa since the 11th century.

  7. Bonwire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonwire

    Bonwire is the home of the famous Akan Kente cloth. [3] According to history, two friends from the town learnt how to weave by watching how a spider spun its web. The two brothers by name Kuragu and Ameyaw in around the middle of the 17th century were hunters by profession.

  8. Talk:Kente cloth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Kente_cloth

    Today, in spite of the proliferation of both the handwoven and machine printed Kente, the authentic forms of the cloth are still regarded as a symbol of social prestige, nobility and a sense of cultural sophistication. According to Akan traditional protocol, Kente is reserved for very important and special social or religious occasions.

  9. Kente Festival - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kente_Festival

    It is celebrated to promote and mark the invention of the Kente industry in the town of Bonwire. [7] [8] [9] The festival also intends to assert the influence of the Kente as cloth from Ghana. [6] The chiefs and the inhabitants of Bonwire wear Kente clothes and various designs they sewn. [1]