Share your favorites on Show & Tell

Beautiful native basket/box

In Furniture > Baskets > Show & Tell.
Furniture207 of 14272Mirror Pier 1 imports
7
Love it
0
Like it

sherrilousherrilou loves this.
WhenIsraelbelievesWhenIsraelbelieves loves this.
dav2no1dav2no1 loves this.
NewfldNewfld loves this.
vcalvcal loves this.
fortapachefortapache loves this.
Vynil33rpmVynil33rpm loves this.
See 5 more
Add to collection

    Please create an account, or Log in here

    If you don't have an account, create one here.


    Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate


    Posted 2 years ago

    Sunnythebu…
    (2 items)

    I found this years ago and loved it upon first sight. It’s a beautiful piece of indigenous handicraft. I live in AZ so I’m assuming it’s Native American but I really don’t know. The workmanship is phenomenal

    Unsolved Mystery

    Help us close this case. Add your knowledge below.

    logo
    Baskets
    See all
    Japanese Chinese Bamboo Woven Food Snack Candy Basket 7.75
    Japanese Chinese Bamboo Woven Food ...
    $17
    A RARE 19TH C COVERED SPLINT BASKET IN THE BEST ORIGINAL SPANISH BROWN PAINT
    A RARE 19TH C COVERED SPLINT BASKET...
    $45
    Longaberger Basket lot of 11 Great Condition 1980 To 1992 Signed All Vintage
    Longaberger Basket lot of 11 Great ...
    $95
    Tobacco Wood Woven Decorative Shallow Basket Decorative Wall And Craft Decor
    Tobacco Wood Woven Decorative Shall...
    $17
    logo
    Japanese Chinese Bamboo Woven Food Snack Candy Basket 7.75
    Japanese Chinese Bamboo Woven Food ...
    $17
    See all

    Comments

    1. CanyonRoad, 2 years ago
      No, it's Asian, not Native American Indian, probably from either the Philippines or China.

      Where an item is found may have nothing to do with where it was made. In basketry, the first thing to aid in identifying that, is the material it is made from (which often is difficult, unless one is familiar with local vegetation from a variety of places.) After that is the weaving technique, the form, the particular stitch used, the start of the basket, the colors, and design patterns. It's the combination of those that determines where a basket was made.

      No Native American basket makers use this particular combination of material, single-rod construction, form, and stitching used to join the coils.

    Want to post a comment?

    Create an account or login in order to post a comment.