Kasaan Whale House Rededication Postcard
/The previous post told a little about the Whale House Rededication and Kasaan. Please enjoy more photos of the event in this post.
The previous post told a little about the Whale House Rededication and Kasaan. Please enjoy more photos of the event in this post.
When the canoes landed at Shakes Island for the Rededication Ceremony (see more on that here) I was intrigued by the cedar bark hats that people were wearing. I had never seen so many of these amazing, precious hats in one place. You can't just walk down to the corner store and buy one. Each hat represents many, many hours of skilled work, and each hat starts as bark on a tree.
Some of the hats are woven so tightly that they are waterproof! The Alaskan Native people have practiced this work for utility and art for centuries.
An abbreviated description of how these hats are made goes like this. Long strips of cedar bark are harvested in the spring or early summer when the sap is running. The brittle outer bark is peeled off of the strip and then the more flexible inner bark is split. Those pieces are then split into very thin strips, which are soaked in water and then woven.
Sometimes Alaska Native weavers use spruce root or cedar root to make hats, but more often those materials are used for baskets and other items.
What caught my eye were the woven designs and embellishments as well as the variations of the basic shape that the weavers created.
The hat above left (with red and black designs) is likely made of spruce root. I couldn't quite catch up to him to ask about it.
I think each of the hats are beautiful, and hope that you enjoyed a closer look!
More posts about Alaska Native culture: Shakes Island Rededication, Canoes Landing for Shakes Island Rededication, Details in a Small Totem Park
More great stuff here: Food and Medicine from Nature
Southeast Alaska! Photos and stories of this temperate rainforest. Visit small, remote towns, walk in the forest, go beachcombing, and meet some of the people in this amazing place.
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