Original apartments
Apartments II
Apartments I
Pillar
Girl with cat
Wednesday, 2:30 on a dark afternoon
Nash Rambler, early 1960s
Rambler, 1958 (PiP for update)
Oops, bad aim (PiP for update)
P.O. drive-through
Ladies and gentlemen, may I present...
Ceremony
Run aground
Small craft warning
I was going to walk to the lake...
Ornamental grass
Swish
Late afternoon
White grass
Mirage
Ramblers, 1960s
Rambler, 1958
Tin Man
Black cloth dress with shell beads attached
Elk teeth were used by higher rank women
Dolls of the Plains Indians
Sioux men's jackets
Sioux deerskin ceremonial clothes
Sioux woman's dress and man's jacket (right)
Sioux woman's ceremonial dress
Yurok and Hoopa baskets
End of the Trail Museum, near Klamath, California.
Fawn Williams Morris
End of the Trail Museum, near Klamath, California.
Baby carriers, various tribes
Caribou hide & fox fur masks
Inuit parka
Lambert ... Melvin ... Henrietta
Follow the path
Terraced
Ford
Gated community
Family view
Sappy new cones
Picea glauca (White Spruce)
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Clothing of Plains Indians


The prairie (or plains) of North America are a vast, largely flat area in the middle of the US and Canada. The many tribes who lived, and still live there, such as the Lakota Sioux, Ojibwe, Plains Cree and Apache were mainly nomadic. The fancy dress was for ceremonial use, including pow-wows. Very old examples, before mid 19th Century, were simpler. By the late 19th Century, there was easier access to seed beads manufactured in Europe. Now, many Native women and some men do leatherwork and beadwork like this to sell.
Incidentally, Europeans, especially Germans, greatly romanticize Native Americans. The subjects of this slight obsession think it's puzzling, or weird, or funny. The second entry here is an example: tinyurl.com/ya4oqazf. I have no idea if the same goes for European thoughts about Canada's First Nations. Well, I could go on and on, but I won't!
End of the Trail Museum at Trees of Mystery, California.
Incidentally, Europeans, especially Germans, greatly romanticize Native Americans. The subjects of this slight obsession think it's puzzling, or weird, or funny. The second entry here is an example: tinyurl.com/ya4oqazf. I have no idea if the same goes for European thoughts about Canada's First Nations. Well, I could go on and on, but I won't!
End of the Trail Museum at Trees of Mystery, California.
kiiti, Andy Rodker, Smiley Derleth, Ernest CH and 13 other people have particularly liked this photo
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Diane Putnam club has replied to Edward BowthorpeHave a nice weekend Diane.
Diane Putnam club has replied to Jaap van 't Veen clubDiane Putnam club has replied to Marie-claire GalletDiane Putnam club has replied to Ronald Losure clubHave a great weekend.
Diane Putnam club has replied to Jeff FarleyDiane Putnam club has replied to Frode clubDiane Putnam club has replied to Pat Del clubDiane Putnam club has replied to Sylvain WiartDiane Putnam club has replied to Keith Burton clubDiane Putnam club has replied to Pam J clubThe special thing in his novels (in contrary to many other novels about Indians) was that he drew a positive image of the Indians and not the usual white is good, red is bad thing.
Diane Putnam club has replied to polytropos clubStunning workmanship ****************
Diane Putnam club has replied to M♥rJ Photogr♥phy !!…Diane Putnam club has replied to Ernest CH club1. they liked it and
2. it was more 'tourist friendly'.
Not sure how true that is.
Diane Putnam club has replied to Andy Rodker clubThe regalia above is 20th century and much more elaborate than in the past. Now, very few outfits they wear to pow-wow are all-leather. We look at the photos and it's all a blur of color, feathers, face paint and beads but I'll bet they know exactly where others are from.
tinyurl.com/y9gckqtr
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