enow.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: american indian beading patterns free

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Peyote stitch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peyote_stitch

    Example of Native American peyote stitch from Oklahoma. The peyote stitch, also known as the gourd stitch, is an off-loom bead weaving technique. Peyote stitch may be worked with either an even or an odd number of beads per row. Both even and odd count peyote pieces can be woven as flat strips, in a flat round shape, or as a tube.

  3. Katrina Mitten - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katrina_Mitten

    Katrina Mitten (born 1962, Huntington, Indiana) [1] is a Native American artist. She is enrolled in the Miami Tribe of Oklahoma. Mitten is beadwork artist, whose embroidery style of beadwork has earned her numerous awards and has been featured in major metropolitan museums.

  4. Joyce Growing Thunder Fogarty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joyce_Growing_Thunder_Fogarty

    Joyce Growing Thunder Fogarty (born 1950), [1] is a Native American artist. She is of the Assiniboine Sioux, Dakota people, and is known for her beadwork and quillwork. She creates traditional Northern Plains regalia. The Smithsonian named her as "one of the West's most highly regarded beadworkers". [2]

  5. Juanita Growing Thunder Fogarty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juanita_Growing_Thunder...

    Her mother, Joyce Growing Thunder Fogarty, is also an acclaimed bead and quill artist [4] [5] and the only artist to have won best of show three times at the Santa Fe Indian Market. [6] Both artists come from a long line of Plains Indians bead workers. [6] Juanita learned skills from her mother and has been beading since the age of three. [7]

  6. Beadwork - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beadwork

    Native American beadwork, already established via the use of materials like shells, dendrite, claws, and bone, evolved to incorporate glass beads as Europeans brought them to the Americas beginning in the early 17th century. [20] [21] Native beadwork today heavily utilizes small glass beads, but artists also continue to use traditionally ...

  7. Jackie Larson Bread - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jackie_Larson_Bread

    Jackie Larson Bread is a Native American beadwork artist from the Blackfeet Reservation in Browning, Montana. [1] Her interest in bead work was sparked from looking at her late-grandmother's beaded pieces. [2] In awe of these objects, Bread self-taught herself how to bead when she was younger and now, she has been beading for more than 20 years.

  1. Ads

    related to: american indian beading patterns free