Sash
early 19th century
Medium/TechniquePlaited (finger woven) wool with glass beads
DimensionsOverall: 284.5 x 20.3 cm (112 x 8 in.)
Credit LineGift of Timothy Phillips
Accession number2008.1455
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Many communities located in the Eastern Woodlands fashioned narrow hand-plaited, or fingerwoven, sashes (or belts) that were used to bundle cradleboards, tow sleds and toboggans, or to fasten garments. Before the arrival of Europeans, the materials used in the manufacture of these items were locally sourced from trees and plants, such as the inner bark of basswood, cedar, and elm; fiber from plants such as milkweed and dogbane; and strips of moose hide. On the East Coast, the Penobscot used the inner fibers of basswood and colored them with mineral dyes of black, red-brown, yellow, or blue. The finest finger weaving could be further embellished with dyed porcupine quills or moose hair. After European colonization, artists began using commercially made and readily available materials obtained through trade, such as the spun wool and glass beads of this sash.
ProvenanceMay 10, 2008, anonymous sale (auction 2408), Skinner, Boston, lot 324, to Timothy Phillips, Cambridge, MA; 2008, gift of Timothy Phillips to the MFA. (Accession Date: December 17, 2008)mid 19th–late 19th century
mid-19th century
mid 19th–late 19th century
1920-1960
1715–90
about 1715
1725–75
1725–75
about 1715
1725–75
about 1715