Navajo$51791$ - definitie. Wat is Navajo$51791$
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Wat (wie) is Navajo$51791$ - definitie

PRODUCTION OF TRADITIONAL RUGS AND BLANKETS OF THE NAVAJO PEOPLE OF THE FOUR CORNERS REGION, UNITED STATES
Navajo Rug; Navajo blanket; Navajo rug; Navajo weaver; Navajo Weaving; Bayeta; Navajo textiles; Navajo blankets
  • Third phase Chief's blanket, circa 1870-1880
  • ''Model of Navajo Loom'', late 19th century, [[Brooklyn Museum]]
  • Navajo weavers at work, [[Hubbell Trading Post]], 1972
  • A transitional blanket, woven circa 1880-1885. The thick handspun yarns and synthetic dyes are typical of pieces made during the transition from blanket weaving to rug weaving, when more weavings were sold to outsiders.
  • ''Weaving'', mid-19th or early 20th century, [[Brooklyn Museum]]

Navajo         
  • Canyon de Chelly]]
  • Hogan at Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park
  • A 19th-century hogan
  • [[Edward S. Curtis]]}}
  • baseball player]] for the [[New York Yankees]].
  • [[Manuelito]] (Navajo, 1818–1893), a chief during the Long Walk
  • Navajos spinning and weaving on vertical loom
  • Navajo Germantown Eye Dazzler Rug, [[Science History Institute]]
  • Dibé (sheep) remain an important aspect of Navajo culture.
  • Navajo Yebichai (Yei Bi Chei) dancers. Edward S. Curtis. USA, 1900. The Wellcome Collection, London
  • Navajo weaver with sheep
  • Navajo woman and child, ''circa'' 1880–1910
  • 19th-century Navajo jewelry with the popular concho and [[dragonfly]] designs
  • ''Probably Bayeta-style Blanket with Terrace and Stepped Design'', 1870–1880, 50.67.54, [[Brooklyn Museum]]
  • Squash blossom necklace
ETHNIC GROUP IN NORTH AMERICA
Navaho; Diné; Dineh; Navajo tribe; Navajo (people); Navajo Indians; Dine people; Navajos; Navahos; Hatałii; Hatalli; Navahu˙; Navajo people; Naabeehó; Naabeeho; History of the Navajo; Navajo culture; List of Navajo people; Navajo art; Prehistory of the Navajos; Navajo emigration to Canada
['nav?h??]
(also Navaho)
¦ noun (plural same or Navajos)
1. a member of an American Indian people of New Mexico and Arizona.
2. the Athabaskan language of the Navajo.
Origin
from Sp. Apaches de Navajo 'apaches from Navajo', from Tewa navahu: 'fields adjoining an arroyo'.
Camp Navajo         
MUNITIONS STORAGE AND REGIONAL TRAINING SITE
Camp navajo; Navajo Ordnance Depot; Navajo Army Depot; Navajo Depot Activity
Camp Navajo was originally opened in 1942 in Bellemont, Arizona. It was originally designated Navajo Ordnance Depot, and its primary use was the storage of ammunition used in the Pacific Theater of World War II.
Miss Navajo         
  • Former Miss Navajo Crystalyne Curley speaking to a crowd after her coronation in 2012.
GAME OF SKILL
Miss Navajo Nation
Miss Navajo Nation is a pageant that has been held annually on the Navajo Nation, United States, since 1952.

Wikipedia

Navajo weaving

Navajo weaving (Navajo: diyogí) are textiles produced by Navajo people, who are based near the Four Corners area of the United States. Navajo textiles are highly regarded and have been sought after as trade items for more than 150 years. Commercial production of handwoven blankets and rugs has been an important element of the Navajo economy. As one art historian wrote, "Classic Navajo serapes at their finest equal the delicacy and sophistication of any pre-mechanical loom-woven textile in the world."

Navajo textiles were originally utilitarian weavings, including cloaks, dresses, saddle blankets, and similar items. By the mid-19th century, Navajo wearing blankets were trade items prized by Indigenous peoples of the Great Plains and neighboring tribes. Toward the end of the 19th century, Navajo weavers began to make rugs for non-Native tourists and for export.

Earlier Navajo textiles have strong geometric patterns. They are a flat tapestry-woven textile produced in a fashion similar to kilims of Eastern Europe and Western Asia, but with some notable differences. In Navajo weaving, the slit weave technique common in kilims is not used, and the warp is one continuous length of yarn, not extending beyond the weaving as fringe. Traders from the late 19th and early 20th century encouraged adoption of some kilim motifs into Navajo designs. Textiles with representational imagery are called pictorial. Today, Navajo weavers work in a wide range of styles from geometric abstraction and representationalism to biomorphic abstraction and use a range of natural undyed sheep wool, natural dyes, and commercial dyes.