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Native American Pottery

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Pottery8080 of 12587Native American PotteryHELP! I cannot identify this pottery!
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    Posted 10 years ago

    melaniej
    (708 items)

    Brown
    3 1/2" tall
    3" wide
    EG on bottom
    I'm not educated on Indian Pottery and have no clue about this......
    a wedding vase
    I have no clue, all I know is that I like it and purchased it :)
    plus another piece with the same EG signature on bottom.
    Any experts out the in CW on Native American Pottery that could help...

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    Native American Pottery
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    L. SAMMIE VINTAGE OLLA FORM ACOMA PUEBLO FINELINE INDIAN POTTERY WATER JAR POT
    L. SAMMIE VINTAGE OLLA FORM ACOMA P...
    $199
    WONDERFUL LARGE OLD HOPI SHALLOW POTTERY BOWL 3 1/2
    WONDERFUL LARGE OLD HOPI SHALLOW PO...
    $99
    NATIVE AMERICAN ACOMA POTTERY OLLA BY KATHY VICTORINO
    NATIVE AMERICAN ACOMA POTTERY OLLA ...
    $280
    Old Antique Hupa Karuk Yurok California Indian Hand Woven Basket Bowl
    Old Antique Hupa Karuk Yurok Califo...
    $324
    logo
    L. SAMMIE VINTAGE OLLA FORM ACOMA PUEBLO FINELINE INDIAN POTTERY WATER JAR POT
    L. SAMMIE VINTAGE OLLA FORM ACOMA P...
    $199
    See all

    Comments

    1. CanyonRoad, 10 years ago
      It's traditionally-made Navajo pottery, made from local clay, fired outdoors in a bonfire, and then coated with pinon pine pitch while it is still red-hot from the fire.

      While it is made in a traditional manner, it is not a traditional form. It's usually called a wedding vase, and has been made by the pueblo tribes of New Mexico since the early 1900's, but there is no documentation of the form ever existing before being "invented" by a Santa Fe trader, who had the Santa Clara potters make them for his curio shop. They have been a popular souvenir tourist item ever since, and today are made by tribes across the nation, and even imported from China!
    2. blunderbuss2 blunderbuss2, 10 years ago
      I agree & I worked the 3 mesas area back in the 70's.
    3. caupwhiting caupwhiting, 10 years ago
      If you take your fingernail and scratch the bottom of the pot (gently) you should be able to smell the pine pitch.

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