Yancton Beaded Cloth and Hide Pipebag, c. third quarter 19th century, the red trade cloth top beaded with curvilinear designs done in black, yellow, and white seed beads on one side, and black, yellow, white, translucent green, and red on the reverse, with polychrome quilled rawhide slats and hide fringe with a row of tin cone janglers from the bottom, (some cloth loss), lg. 41 in.
Lakota Pictorial Beaded and Quilled Hide Pouch, c. late 19th century, the front with the stylized head of a buffalo on fine red lines, with beaded border lane, the reverse with multicolored geometric devices, quill-wrapped rawhide handle and slats at the bottom, trimmed with tin cones and red dyed chicken feathers, (minor quill loss), lg. overall 16 1/2 in.
Central Plains Quilled Hide Pouch, Arapaho, c. 1870s, with beaded cloth strap, probably made from recycled quill-wrapped rawhide slats, with dew claw danglers, 7 1/2 x 8 in.
Western Carved Buffalo Horn, c. 19th century, a powder horn with concentric carved wood plug held with metal tacks, lg. 13 in.
Northwest Babiche Bag, Great Slave/Mackenzie River Area, c. mid-19th century, made from netted rawhide and smoked moose hide, the top panel decorated with red trade cloth, multicolored quillwork and seed beads, remnant pigment on the netted bag, with quill and pony bead decorated hide fringe and two-color wool tassels, (the red tested as cochineal dyed by David Wenger), with quill-wrapped carrying strap, custom display frame, bag excluding fringe 19 x 13 in.
Copy and images from Skinner.
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