My friend and I went to the Museo Ixchel in Guatemala City on Saturday morning. This museum is dedicated to Guatemalan textiles - history, technique, materials, etc. I really enjoyed it! Here are some of the photos I took of the "tools of the weaving trade".
Museo Ixchel, on the campus of Universidad Francisco Marroquin in Guatemala City. It was a really lovely campus.
Men weave large pieces of cloth -- such as those made for bedspreads and cortes (skirts) -- on the foot loom. Here you can see details of the threads, including the ones dyed in the ikat/jaspe method (tie-dying!). The weavers know how to use these threads to come out with designs in the finished cloth.
A small loom used for making cintas (ribbons) for the hair
Designs are sketched on cloth with pencil before being sewn.
Embroidering details by hand (here, a huipil is stretched over a collander)
Embroidering details using a sewing machine
For Part II, I'll show some of the output of these processes!
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1 comment:
What wonderful work and interesting way some of it was done..
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