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  2. Inuit clothing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inuit_clothing

    What clothing they did wear, usually a small jacket, cap, mittens, or socks, was made from the thinnest skins available: fetal or newborn caribou, crow, or marmot. [68] [69] The Qikirtamiut of the Belcher Islands in Hudson Bay sewed bonnets for their infants from the delicate neck and head skins of eider ducks. [70]

  3. History of Inuit clothing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Inuit_clothing

    Skin clothing is preferred for winter wear, especially for Inuit who make their living outdoors in traditional occupations such as hunting and trapping, or modern work like scientific research. [ 92 ] [ 104 ] [ 141 ] [ 142 ] Traditional skin clothing is also preferred for special occasions like drum dances, weddings, and holiday festivities.

  4. Inuit cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inuit_cuisine

    The high costs of hunting equipment—snowmobiles, rifles, sleds, camping gear, gasoline, and oil—is also causing a decline in families who hunt for their meals. [10] An Inuk hunter skinning a ringed seal. Seal: Depending on the season, Inuit hunt for different types of seal: harp seal, harbour seal, and bearded seal.

  5. Sealskin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sealskin

    The Inuit, a people indigenous to North America and Greenland, argue that banning both seal products and seal hunting is detrimental to their way of life and the Inuit culture. [1] Further, films like Angry Inuk (2016) expose the importance of sealing in providing a sustainable way of making money for Inuit that does not require destructive ...

  6. Inuit culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inuit_culture

    Hunting provided the Inuit with a balanced diet and the raw materials for clothing, housing, household implements and heating, boat and sled-building, hunting weapons, toys, and art-objects. Stones, carefully chosen and carved, were used for select but important objects: arrow, spear, and harpoon heads, hide-scrapers, and knives.

  7. Snow goggles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snow_goggles

    Inuit goggles made from caribou antler with caribou sinew for a strap Inuit snow goggles from Alaska. Made from carved wood, 1880–1890 (top) and Caribou antler 1000–1800 (bottom) Snow goggles ( Inuktitut : ilgaak or iggaak , syllabics : ᐃᓪᒑᒃ or ᐃᒡᒑᒃ ; [ 1 ] Central Yupik : nigaugek , nigauget ) are a type of eyewear ...

  8. Research on Inuit clothing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Research_on_Inuit_clothing

    Scholarship of Inuit clothing did not pick up again until the 1980s and 1990s, beginning with fieldwork conducted by Inuit clothing expert Bernadette Driscoll-Engelstad, and supported by accounts created by northern seamstresses. [16]

  9. Yupʼik clothing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yupʼik_clothing

    Full-conical closed hunting hat or bentwood hat, bentwood helmet, conical wooden hat, conical hat (ugtarcuun, ugtarcurcuun in Yup'ik; derived from ugtaq "seal on an ice floe or shore") is shaped like a pointed piece of ice. Bentwood hunting hats helped to conceal the seal hunter as he floated in a white kayak among the broken spring floes. A ...