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Native Pride Pottery.

Native Pride Pottery.
Native Pride Pottery.
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As with basketry, American Indian pottery traditions are difficult to generalize about because they developed so differently in different tribes. The fact of the matter is, everybody needs someplace to store their corn. As far as I know just about every culture that does any farming at all developed pottery in ancient times, and American Indians are no exception. Southwestern Indian pottery is probably the most famous, for its colorful designs and figures, distinctive forms like the double-spouted wedding vase, and unique techniques like the Pueblo "black on black" firing. The Southwest tribes are unquestionably the ones who have preserved their ceramics heritage the best--and, not coincidentally, the ones who still live nearest to their original homelands. Elsewhere in North America, Indians were forcibly transplanted to reservations where their traditional agriculture was not viable; less malignantly, some tribes, like the Sioux and Cheyenne, abandoned their farming practices and adopted a more nomadic lifestyle when they acquired horses from the Europeans and were able to pursue the buffalo herds. However, before European arrival, native pottery was made throughout most of the continent: by the Cherokee and other Southeastern Indians, the Iroquois and other Eastern Woodland Indians, the Cheyenne and other Plains Indians, and the Shoshoni and other Great Basin Indians. (Further to the north, most of the people were hunter-gatherers, for whom pottery is less useful and more of a liability.) Some artists from these non-Southwestern tribes have recently begun to reclaim their ceramic traditions. Though Native American pottery styles, firing and finishing methods, and decorative patterns varied widely, the basic technology did not--as far as I know no tribe ever used pottery wheels or other spinning instruments. All of them made coil and pinch pots by hand, as their descendants still do today.

What's Included......

1 Pottery piece (mod/trans)
(1 prim ea,)

Reg Price $ 49L

Intro Price $ 39L

We are sure you will enjoy this new Creation for many years to come.

These pieces would look very nice on each end of a couch, or one piece by a fire place empty, while the other is next to the door with flowers in it.

The Imagination is endless.

  • 1 prim
  • Modify to your satasfaction
  • Highly Detailed Pottery

L$49

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The Grey Goose
Vendido por: Dobby Meskin

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Este artículo se te entregará directamente a ti, o bien a un amigo tuyo de Second Life, abierto y listo para utilizar. No se requieren terreno ni un sandbox.

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