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Camera - Vintage Photos IconIMAGES OF THE AMERICAN WEST

Vintage Apache Photographs

 

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Apache Basketwork, 1907

 

Apache basketwork by Edward S. Curtis, 1907

Apache basketwork by Edward S. Curtis, 1907

 This image available for photographic prints and downloads HERE!

 


The
Apache tribe have long been known for the exquisite basket work. Requiring more than just skill, basket weaving for the Apache required imagination and artistry as they wove everything from practical tools to baby carriers, food and water carriers, and more.

 

Apache women made the baskets from thin sticks of willow, cottonwood, or sumac which they stitched together with split sticks of the same material. The split pieces became flexible when soaked in water for a while. To add color, they used the devil's claw plant for red and the bark of the yucca root for red. To some of their baskets, they added buckskin fringes and painted designs. For carrying water, the women made a bottle-shaped basket and then covered the outside of it with pitch (tree sap) to keep them water-tight.

 

 

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Also See:

 

Apache - The Fiercest Warriors in the Southwest

Kidnapped By the Apache

 

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From the Rocky Mountain General Store

Saloon Style Advertising Prints - What were on the walls of the saloons in the Old West?  Likely, much of the same as those you find today - advertisements for liquor, beer, and tobacco.  Plus the "decadent" women of the time.  In our Photo Print Shop, you'll find dozens of photographs for decorating your "real" saloon or den in a saloon type atmosphere.

          

 

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