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Morrow, Mable Indian Rawhide, an American Folk Art University of Oklahoma 1975 Hardcover Good in Good dust jacket It is a former library book with the following treatments: a couple of stickers and stamps in the front, a withdrawl sticker in the rear, dewey decimal sticker on the spine of the dustjacket, stamps to the edge of the pageblock. The interior is clean and bright, aside from the lib markings, a little regular reading wear. The boards show wear to the edges, and tape marks. The dustjacket is good, kept under cover, the spine appears to be sunned. ; Ex-Library; B/W and Color Photos; 4to 11" - 13" tall; 243 pages; Author Mable Morrow, foreword by ethnologist Alice Marriott. Indian rawhide was the basis of one of the major and widespread pre-Cololumbian folk arts of the North American continent. Rawhide provided the containers for the preservation of dried buffalo meat, and other supplies. It supplied shelter as lodges and was fashioned into clothing. When the buffalo disappeared, a whole way of life was destroyed in very few years. The techniques involved in the manufacture and decoration of rawhide can be of great interest to all kinds of artists and technicians today. The main chapter headings: Foreword, Preface, The Rawhide People and their Culture, The Parfleche and its Manufacture, Notes on the Tribes, Chart of Parfleche Characteristics, Other Articles from Rawhide, Appendices, Bibliography, Index Profusely illustrated with b/w photos, drawings and paintings by the author. Price:
24.00 USD
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