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Feathered Bonnet Trailer26.803.1

Robert B. Woodward Memorial Fund

Culture
Lakota and Sioux
Material
wool cloth, eagle feather, rawhide hide, dyed horsehair, tin cone and porcupine quill
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
View Item Record
Beaded and Quilled Bag32.2099.32550

Bequest of W.S. Morton Mead

Culture
Blackfoot
Material
bead, buckskin, quill, muslin, tin, horse hair, sinew and cotton thread
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
View Item Record
Pair of Men's Moccasins46.96.9a-b

These modernistic looking design moccasins are beaded with green, pink, red and dark blue beads. The front flap consists of two long, narrow beaded tassels with a blue diamond design on pink background with decorations of tin tinklers and horsehair dyed orange.

Culture
Blackfoot
Material
leather, bead, orange horse hair and tin
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
View Item Record
Black Pouch50.67.15

This dyed black deerskin pouch is decorated with a false flap, a modified "V" shaped line that is elaborated to seem like the opening of the bag. The edge of this "flap" is bordered with braided quill work in stripes of orange and blue, edged at the top and bottom of the border with thin white lines. A thin, undulating white line has been embroidered above this border. From the bottom of the border, enhancing this illusion of a flap, metal cones filled with reddish deer hair are suspended. Similar cones with deer hair are suspended from the bottom of the bag. The bottom half of the bag is embroidered with quills in a complex of motifs. Three double-curved forms or bifurcating lines are embroidered with thin lines or orange, blue and white. These forms "sprout" from a wider double band of orange and white braided quill work, elaborated with thin outlines in blue and white. The border or groundline for these sprouting forms is surrounded by an irregular, zig-zag outline in white with some blue at bottom. At the base of each of the five resulting points of the zig-zag are five circles, each composed of concentric rings made of quill embroidered lines of white, orange and blue. The ribbon strap of the pouch is now deteriorated, appearing to be maroon with yellowish stripes.

Culture
Delaware
Material
buckskin, porcupine quill, tin, deer hair, ribbon, glass bead and cloth
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
View Item Record
2 Bracelets with Incised Designs50.67.142a-b

Henry L. Batterman Fund and the Frank Sherman Benson Fund

Culture
Native American
Material
tin
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
View Item Record
Tipi Bag or Possible BagX1111.1

Also called a storage bag, tipi bag or possible bag. The beads are sewn with sinew in a 'lazy stitch'. Kroeber called the design a transverse bar or lengthened checker pattern. Bag is beaded on one side with a decoration of crossed and abstracted forms in red, blue, gold and green. The edges are also beaded with metal jingles and orange dyed horsehair decorations. The two-ended pitchfork type design is typically Sioux. It is Central Plains but not Cheyenne or Arapaho. Bead workers would also do this type of beading to show off their expertise so some were also made to be ornamental or given away as gifts.

Culture
Sioux
Material
hide, bead, tin cone and horse hair
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
View Item Record
Scalping Knife and Sheath50.67.118a-b

The slightly curved steel blade of the knife is bound to the well-round bone (?) handle by a worked sheet of brass. This brass is finished in a series of little points at the handle end and incised with series of simple lines, both parallel and diagonal, to form bands. The sheath for this knife is worked with porcupine quills in purplish brown, orange, yellow, and natural white in a motif of connecting diamonds. The body of the sheath has an orange triangle with "V" shaped outlines at the very bottom, below the pattern of connected diamonds. The panel or cuff is striped. Many metal cones are suspended from the bottom of the cuff and one single cone, or tinkler is suspended from the bottom tip of the sheath. These 'tin-tinklers' on the panel were once quill-wrapped.The leather is thread sewn so that beige ribbon adorns the panel or cuff.

Culture
Sioux
Material
hide, metal, wood, porcupine quill, brass metal, skin, cloth, tin and sinew
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
View Item Record
Drawstring Bag43.201.283

No specific tribal designation, probably Plains This is made from commercially tanned cowhide, sinew sewn, with metal tinklers and glass beads.

Culture
Plains
Material
buckskin, tin, bead and sinew
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
View Item Record
Strap Dress with Red and Green Embroidery50.67.2

This dress is composed of four sections of very white and pliable skin, probably employing at least two deer or caribou hides. Two large pieces of skin were sewn together to form the front and back of the dress and the upper edge of the skin is turned down as a long graceful flap to the waist. Two smaller pieces of skin are added to serve as shoulder straps. The entire dress, including the quillwork, is sewn together with thread. The seams that join the two major sections are fringed. Fringe near the shoulder is clipped very short so that it appears "pinked" and the fringe at the bottom of the dress is wrapped with orange and blue porcupine quills. The decoration of the shoulder straps is somewhat unusual as it differs from front to back. Scallops terminate the straps on the dress' front' while fringes decorate the shorter ends of the straps at the back. The straps are also decorated with a row of tiny black beads that edge the sides of these straps and surround the three scalloped lobes on each. Pairs of black beads in a double row decorate the section of the strap that intersects with the low neck line. Each scalloped portion of the straps is also ornamented, right and left, with bows made of hide strips wrapped at intervals with orange and light blue quills. Similar string-like ornaments are also attached at the proper right side of the front flap and the proper left side on the black flap. Quillwork strips across the body of the dress are in green, black, brown, white, reddish orange and light blue. Black seed beads and blue pony beads are applied as a scalloped border on an added piece of skin near the hem of the dress and tin cones are suspended in pairs from the apex of each of these beaded curves by thin hide strands wrapped at intervals with orange quills. See Jarvis report in Arts of Americas files.

Culture
Yanktonai, Nakota and Sioux
Material
emulsion cured buckskin, dyed porcupine quill, glass bead, tin, copper tinkler, thread, sinew and pigment
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
View Item Record
Knife Sheath11.694.9004

Knife sheath with red, and blue on white beaded designs on one side and white with blue design on the reverse side. There are three tin tinklers at the bottom point and a dangler with two tin tinklers on either side. Sean Standing Bear thought this might possibly be an awl case although it is wider than most awl cases.

Culture
Osage
Material
hide, bead and tin
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
View Item Record