Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Blackfoot. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Blackfoot. Sort by date Show all posts

Sunday, April 19, 2020

The Dress Of A Blackfoot Brave

       The Blackfoot Natives home was in the far northwestern corner of the Great Plains. Their clothes were made from the skins of wild animals. Try to imagine the skill and the hard work that was involved in making it. Their robes and moccasin soles were made from buffalo hide; and hunting buffaloes was one of the hardest things which the Indian men had to do.
       Before white men gave the Natives guns, buffaloes were killed with bows and arrows or clubs after they had been driven into a pound. The pound was an enclosure, usually built at the foot of a cliff or high bank. Above it was the level land where the buffaloes grazed; and leading toward it, the Indians placed two rows of stone-piles in a great V. When the drive began, young men, working at some distance from the pound, gradually drove the herd toward it. As the animals passed the first of the stone piles, other men, who had hidden behind them, jumped up and with yells and waving of robes frightened the buffaloes into running further down the lane. There they were frightened by more and more men; and as they fled, the lane narrowed steadily; so that, when the leaders finally reached the edge of the cliff, there was no room to turn back, and they could only jump into the enclosure below. Like sheep, the buffaloes always followed their leaders; and when the whole herd was once in the pound, it was easy for the Indians to kill them.
       Antelopes were also caught in a pound. Deer were captured in snares made of braided rawhide. They were left in the deer trails; and the hunter trusted their catching the deer to chance. Weasels, or ermine, and many other small animals and birds were also caught in snares.
       The removal of an animal's skin was the work of the indigenous  men; but once removed, it was given over to the women; and its dressing and the cutting, sewing and decorating of garments to be made from it, were all their work. First of all, the skin had to be staked to the ground, all the flesh scraped away from it, the uneven portions pared down, and, if a smooth skin was desired, the hair scraped off. Bleached and dried, the product of this first process was rawhide. You will find quirts, rattles, drums, parfleches, moccasin soles, and many other things made from it. Natives used fleshers and scrapers to prepare the skins.
Man's quilled buckskin vest, Oglala Sioux, 
South Dakota CA, 1880.
      When skins were to be used in making clothing, soft bags or tipi covers, the rawhide had to be thoroughly oiled, shrunk with warm water, stretched, given a smooth grain by rubbing it with a rough-edged stone and, finally, dried and softened by pulling it back and forth through a loop of twisted sinews fastened to a lodge pole. In addition, deer skins were often smoked to give them a deeper color.
       Buffalo robes were always worn by the men with the head of the animal to the left, the tail to the right. The painted, embroidered or beaded decorations usually extended from the head to the tail; and thus, when worn, went around the Native's waist.
       Shirts were made from deer, antelope or buffalo calf skins. Two skins were used to make the body of the shirt; and the sleeves were cut from one or two more. The ragged skin from the animal's hind legs hung down from the lower edges of the shirt; and all edges of the skins, except where they were joined at the shoulders, were cut in fringes. The leggings, too, had fringe cut on their lower edge and often on their side seam.
       In sewing, the native women used thread made from buffalo sinew. Broad bands of it were dried and stored each year. Shreds were pulled from the bands with the teeth, were softened in water, smoothed and twisted. In place of needles, large bone bodkins were used.
       Shirts and leggings were decorated in several different ways. The Blackfoot people were especially fond of adding fringes of ermine skins to the sleeves and shoulders of their shirts. Each strand of the fringe required one entire skin; so, if there were a hundred strands, a hundred ermine had to be caught and their skins dressed.
       Another favored decoration was a series of bands of porcupine quill embroidery. Usually, these bands were placed across each shoulder, down each sleeve and along the outside of each legging. The quills were dyed, flattened, folded so as to be of the proper length for the design and carefully sewed in place. After white men came, beads replaced porcupine quills almost entirely. The beads were strung on threads; and the strings thus made were sewed to strips of soft skin. Sometimes the quills or strings of beads were wrapped about the fringes to make them more handsome.

Thursday, November 14, 2019

Thanksgiving Doll Crafts

Far left, a mixed media pumpkin pie. Left center, Ma Ingall's warm new shawl, Center Right,
 a cornucopia full of a bountiful harvest. Far right, scrap fabric slices of pie.

         The first Thanksgiving in the North American colonies was instituted by William Bradford, the Governor of Plymouth, and first observed by the Puritans, who suffering from hunger and privation and who were truly thankful when the first harvest brought them the means of support for the approaching winter. 
       This holiday has come to us as "the religious and social festival that converts every family mansion into a family meeting-house." From far and near our family members come, filling the cars, planes and trains with merry chatter and anticipated pleasures of this popular holiday. How near and dear all the bright faces are as they gather around large tables for Thanksgiving feasts!
       Below are some amusements and crafts, as well as history surrounding this popular holiday that will add to the merriment of this holiday as you spend time relaxing in your home with your dolls.
I'm happy on Thanksgiving.
I've eaten till I'm sore. But
I wish I was an elephant, then
I could hold lots more!
Make Simple Thanksgiving Crafts for Your Dolls: You can help grow our listing by making requests for particular Thanksgiving crafts in the comment box below:
  1. Craft a Foam Pumpkin Pie - You can make a pumpkin pie out of any materials...even foam sheets!
  2. Sculpt Paper Mache Pumpkins - These adorable faux pumpkins are handcrafted for our 18" dollhouse decor for Fall.
  3. Papier-mâché Two Delicious Pretend Pies! - make pretend pies for any occasion for your child sized kitchen using paper pulp, newsprint, and paint.
  4. Craft a Cornucopia for A Doll's Harvest - an old-fashioned way to display harvest bounty at your doll's kitchen table.
  5. Scrap Fabric Pumpkin Pie - these pretend pies are made from silk and lace fabric scraps...
  6. Craft a Pistachio Nut Wreath - simple and elegant, this nut shell wreath is the perfect size for an American Girl Doll room display.
  7. Craft A Horno Oven for Josefina or Kaya - any historical doll will appreciate this outdoor oven made to look like real clay.
  8. Oven Bake Clay Pumpkin Pie - make pumpkin pies the easy way with oven-bake clay this year; even the whipped cream topping is shaped by hand!
  9. DIY a Gas Stove Top and Oven for Barbie's Family - Every little doll needs her own oven to bake for her friends and family; this one is simple to make using a recycled box and tin foil.
  10. Ma Ingall's New Shawl - use a wooly scarf or woven wool scraps to cut and shape a shawl for your pioneer dolls.
  11. Sew Four Reversible Pumpkin Placemats - placemats come in handy whenever you need to decorate a doll dinner display!
  12. DIY Doll Sized Clay Crescent Rolls... - warm, comforting clay crescents for your doll's Thanksgiving meal.
  13. Cut and Assemble The Puritan (Pilgrim) Twins Paper Dolls - paper dolls for a fun Thanksgiving craft!
  14. Sculpt a Holiday Turkey Using Paper Pulp  - This version of our doll's main course, the turkey, is challenging to craft.
  15. Autumn Printable Paintings for Your Dollhouse - change over the dollhouse decor for the cool weather this year... Lovely fall foliage to dress up the dollhouse walls.
  16. Mail Old-Fashioned Thanksgiving Cards to Your Dolls - help your dolls keep in touch with their friends and family through the mail with these charming old greetings.
  17. 6 Old-Fashioned Side Dishes for Dolly's Thanksgiving Feast! - Is your doll in need of a feast? We have plenty of ideas for the doll's festive buffet here.
  18. 3 Comforting Casseroles for A Doll's Thanksgiving Dinner - DIY comfort food your any doll Thanksgiving meal...
  19. Native American paper dolls to color - two paper dolls, one mother, one son, two changes of clothing, there is a small baby included in the mother's second outfit
  20. Color Thanksgiving Favor Boxes for A Doll's Party - Make these for a special tea party during the fall and invite all of your doll friends.
  21. Decorate the Dollhouse With Pumpkins, Mums and Toadstools - Hot glue easy Autumn displays to decorate the dollhouse...
  22. Make a pumpkin with a web shaped vine 
  23. Craft a Pow-wow drum and mallet - Your Native American Dolls can celebrate their own way for a feast of their making using Pow-wow drums...
The Pilgrims Searching for A New Land: History, Legend and Poems. Be Thankful for Pilgrims Searching and God's Protection . . .
Be Thankful for Gifts From Native People:
  1. Gifts From The Native Americans  - Plants that were cultivated by the Indians for thousands of years before the Europeans discovered the New World...
  2. Cultivated Plants  - The indigenous people of the Chicago region and of the eastern woodlands were farmers, or at least they were during the summer months.
  3. Wild Plants - The natives used a great many wild plants, of which wild rice was the most important.
  4. Nuts and Berries - Nuts and berries were found in large quantities in the northern and eastern woodlands of the United States.
  5. Beverages - Water was, of course, the most common Native American drink.
  6. Maple Sugar - The eastern woodland natives used maple sugar in almost all of their foods.
  7. Seasoning - One important plant used as a flavoring was a kind of wild onion that grew in great numbers many years ago in the rich moist soil of the areas around Chicago.
  8. Bark and Bast - To make their houses as well as their canoes and a great many of their household articles these indigenous peoples who lived in the north, used the bark of the paper birch that grew along rivers and the shores of lakes.
  9. Medicine - Many different plants and plant parts were used to make medicines.
  10. Gourds and Pumpkins and Their Uses - Children of our country often become acquainted with pumpkins and their relatives in the fall of the year‚ particularly during October and November.
  11. Nuts - How native Americans used nuts and preserved them.
  12. The Weaving of Native Americans
Remember The Indigenous People:
  • The Navajo Tribe - Like other Apacheans, the Navajos were semi-nomadic from the 16th through the 20th centuries. Their extended kinship groups had seasonal dwelling areas to accommodate livestock, agriculture, and gathering practices. As part of their traditional economy, Navajo groups may have formed trading or raiding parties, traveling relatively long distances.
  • The Powhatan Tribe - The Powhatans have also been known as Virginia Algonquians, as the Powhatan language is an eastern-Algonquian language, also known as Virginia Algonquian. It is estimated that there were about 14,000–21,000 Powhatan people in eastern Virginia, when the English colonized Jamestown in 1607.
  • The Blackfoot Tribe - Today, three Blackfoot First Nation band governments (the Siksika, Kainai, and Piikani Nations) reside in the Canadian province of Alberta, while the Blackfeet Nation is a federally recognized Native American tribe of Southern Piikani in Montana, United States. Additionally, the Gros Ventre are members of the federally recognized Fort Belknap Indian Community of the Fort Belknap Reservation of Montana in the United States and the Tsuutʼina Nation is a First Nation band government in Alberta, Canada.
  • The Nez Perce Tribe -  Indigenous people of the Plateau who are presumed to have lived on the Columbia River Plateau in the Pacific Northwest a region for at least 11,500 years.
  • The Indigenous People of Peru - Native Peruvians, comprise a large number of ethnic groups who inhabit territory in present-day Peru. Indigenous cultures developed here for thousands of years before the arrival of the Spanish in 1532.
Our Favorite Doll Fan Video from YouTube for Thanksgiving:
  1. Thanksgiving Turkey for Dolls from OMaG
  2. The Worst Thanksgiving - AGSM (mini movie)
  3. DIY American Girl Doll Thanksgiving Food + Decor by SewCraftyAG
  4. American Girl Doll Thanksgiving from americangirlashlyn
  5. American Girl Doll Thanksgiving Room Set UP
  6. DIY An American Girl Doll Thanksgiving
  7. American Girl Doll Thanksgiving Food
  8. No Food on Thanksgiving?
  9. Thanksgiving Lunch
  10. Thanksgiving Cooking from mixiepixie
  11. What the Dolls Are Thankful For . . .
How People Celebrated Thanksgiving Long Ago...
  1. Ezra's Thanksgivin' Out West - Ezra had written a letter to the home folks, and in it he had complained that never before had he spent such a weary, lonesome day as this Thanksgiving Day had been.
  2. A Pioneer Thanksgiving  - The first ''Thanksgiving" of which I have any recollection was many years ago, "away down in Maine," in the old farmhouse that was located upon the banks of the St. Croix river at Calais, Washington county. (from O'Brien's Pioneer Memories)
  3. Dress Like a Pilgrim - Contrary to popular belief, Pilgrims did not dress in all black. by GSMD (Mayflower descendants)
  4. The Other National Bird - How the turkey was once considered to be the U.S. national bird...
  5. Lincoln's Timeless Thanksgiving Proclamation from 1863 - from the National Archives
  6. wigwam timelapse - Funding for the wigwam generously provided by the Vernon D. and Florence E. Roosa Family Foundation Memorial Fund of the Hartford Foundation for Public Giving, and by the Hudson River Valley National Heritage Area.
  7. Origin Of Thanksgiving Food - The surprising origins of Thanksgiving foods by PBS
  8. The Wild Turkey, A Vanishing Game Bird - In the pioneer period of American life, wild turkeys roamed over wide areas from New England to Texas...
  9. The Powhatan Natives - One of the most famous stories in our American history centers about a fun-loving Indian girl known as Pocahontas.
Harvest Here and Now: Recipes, Inspiration and Growing Things!
  1. Harvesting Cranberries in Cape Cod
  2. Thanksgiving Features Native American Foods
  3. Three Sister Soup from Bertha Skye
  4. How to Deep Fry a Turkey and Family Traditions from allofdestiny
  5. Growing Ancient Grains In Your Garden
  6. Making Fresh Pumpkin for Pies The Fast & Easy Way
  7. How to Make Navajo Fry Bread
  8. The Farmer Growing 400 Different Kinds of Potatoes
  9. Native Grains - Lets make bread!
  10. Sweet Team Cook Thanksgiving Dinner!
  11. Soft & Fluffy Pumpkin Dinner Rolls
  12. Why Leaves Change Color
  13. Turkey Farm Prepares for Thanksgiving
  14. How Native Americans Are Saving Vegetables from Extinction
  15. How to Cook An Entire Thanksgiving Dinner: Step by Step Instructions
  16. How To Make Pumpkin Cakes for Desert
  17. Making The Ultimate Thanksgiving Holiday Feast with Rita
Poems About: Autumn, Thanksgiving, Fall Months:
  1. The Night Before Thanksgiving - 'Twas the night before Thanksgiving...'
  2. A Thanksgiving Dinner - 'Young Turkey Gobbler, with highly arched head...'
  3. A Thanksgiving Acrostic - 'T is for turkey the biggest in town,'
  4. Merry Autumn Days  - 'I Hail the merry autumn days...'
  5. Five Kernels of Corn - 'Twas the year of the famine in Plymouth of old...'
  6. September  - 'Again has come the sweet September...'
  7. Thanksgiving On The Farm  - 'Oh, it surely seems years since the dear children's voices...'
  8. Cat's Thanksgiving Day - 'Give me turkey for my dinner...'
  9. The Feast-Time of the Year - 'This is the feast-time of the year...'
  10. Miss Maple Tree's Party - 'Miss Maple Tree a party gave...'
  11. Harvest Time by Clara R. Bete - 'Jack Frost is dressing up the trees...' 
  12. My Apple Tree - 'I had a lovely apple..."
  13. Indian Children - 'Where we walk to school each day...'
  14. The Flower-Fed Buffaloes -'The flower-fed buffaloes of the spring...'
  15. In The Indian Summer - 'The squirrels chattered in the leaves...'
Kids Talk About Thanksgiving:
  1. Pilgrim Life with Scholastic News
  2. The Wampanoag Way (for kids)
  3. Kids Picking Cranberries the Old Fashioned Way
  4. 100 Years of Thanksgiving
  5. Thankful for Edmunds School
Poems About Giving in General:
Films for A Kid Friendly Thanksgiving:
The Indian in the Cupboard
 movie poster.
  • Indian In The Cupboard: Trailer,  1995 American family fantasy drama film directed by Frank Oz and written by Melissa Mathison, based on the children's book of the same name by Lynne Reid Banks. The story is about a boy who receives a cupboard as a gift on his ninth birthday. He later discovers that putting toy figures in the cupboard, after locking and unlocking it, brings the toys to life. Read more...
  • Pocahontas: Trailer, 1995 American animated musical romantic drama film produced by Walt Disney Feature Animation for Walt Disney Pictures. Read more...
  • Dances With Wolves for older teens: Trailer, 1990 American epic Western film starring, directed and produced by Kevin Costner. It is a film adaptation of the 1988 book of the same name by Michael Blake that tells the story of Union Army lieutenant John J. Dunbar (Costner) who travels to the American frontier to find a military post and of his dealings with a group of Lakota. Read more...

"Diving over haystacks!" silhouette.

Season Ambience Video: