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  2. File : Estelita Bantilan Igem Silel sleeping mat weavingA.jpg

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Estelita_Bantilan...

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  3. Regina Pilawuk Wilson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regina_Pilawuk_Wilson

    She is a master weaver and took up acrylic painting in 2001. Her subject matter is based around weaving fibre art. [2] At age ten, her grandmother taught her where, when, and how to collect the right grasses, vines, and sources of natural colour like flowers, berries, and roots. She learned many weaving techniques.

  4. Haja Amina Appi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haja_Amina_Appi

    Haja Appi was known for creating finely woven mats with highly intricate designs. An older tradition produced Sama mats in plain white. However, Haja Appi experimented with dyes for her designs, mixing her own dyes to create striking designs for her mats.

  5. Textile arts of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Textile_arts_of_the...

    [7] Aguayos are clothes woven from camelid fibers with geometric designs that Andean women wear and use for carrying babies or goods. Inca textiles Awasaka was the most common grade of weaving produced by the Incas of all the ancient Peruvian textiles, this was the grade most commonly used in the production of Inca clothing.

  6. Banig - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banig

    Banig in the Philippines sold with various other traditional handicrafts Women weaving banigs at Saob Cave in Basey, Samar. A baníg (pronounced buh-NIG) is a traditional handwoven mat of the Philippines predominantly used as a sleeping mat or a floor mat.

  7. Binakael - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binakael

    The techniques create illusionistic designs similar to op art patterns and were popular by the late 19th century, [4] when the United States colonized the Philippines and American museums collected many traditional Philippine textiles. Ilocos Sur weaver . Binakael patterns may use a two-block rep weave, making them double-sided, but with colour ...

  8. Melissa Cody - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melissa_Cody

    World Traveler (2014) at the National Gallery of Art in 2023. A selected work at the Garth Greenman gallery and part of the Stark Museum Navajo Weaving: Tradition and Trade exhibit, World Traveler is a 90x 48 in. wool textile piece. [6] [9] Like the Germantown Revival style of weaving, Cody is said to create a "illusion of movement". [1]

  9. Okir - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Okir

    Detail of a panolong with a naga motif, from the National Museum of Anthropology. Okir, also spelled okil or ukkil, is the term for rectilinear and curvilinear plant-based designs and folk motifs that can be usually found among the Moro and Lumad people of the Southern Philippines, as well as parts of Sabah.