. How to make Indian and other baskets . FIGS. 86, 87 AND 88. FUEGIAN COILED BASKET AND DETAILS. one of the two rods is closed twice. This Apache ware is sewed withyucca fiber and the brown sterns of other plants, producing a brillianteffect, and the result of the special technic is a flat surface like that ofpottery (fig. 79). The U. S. National Museum possesses a single pieceof precisely the same technic from the kindred of the Apache on thelower Yukon. E. Rod and welt foundation.—In this kind of basketry the single-rod foundation is overlaid by a strip or splint of tough fiber, some-times t


. How to make Indian and other baskets . FIGS. 86, 87 AND 88. FUEGIAN COILED BASKET AND DETAILS. one of the two rods is closed twice. This Apache ware is sewed withyucca fiber and the brown sterns of other plants, producing a brillianteffect, and the result of the special technic is a flat surface like that ofpottery (fig. 79). The U. S. National Museum possesses a single pieceof precisely the same technic from the kindred of the Apache on thelower Yukon. E. Rod and welt foundation.—In this kind of basketry the single-rod foundation is overlaid by a strip or splint of tough fiber, some-times the same as that with which the sewing is done; at others astrip of leaf or bast. The stitches pass over the rod and strip whichare on top down under the welt only of the coil below, the stitches in-terlocking. The strip of tough fiber between the two rods which. w 55 pq•4 r^ g I-H O o O t—( fe


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Keywords: ., bookauthorjamesgeo, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookyear1903