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Birch barkexpand_more
Bequest from the Karen Daniels Petersen American Indian Collectionexpand_more 2008.99.81
Birch bark is harvested in the spring when the sap is flowing in the tree. Spring is also an ideal time to find inspiration for flower pattern cutouts. A symmetric, mirrored pattern is easily produced from a irregular, non-symmetric pattern by tracing a cutout, flipping the cutout over and tracing it to complement the first tracing.
--Andrea Carlson
The Anishinabe Ojibwe are pattern makers. The later beadwork patterns are influenced by earlier birch bark bitten patterns. A think piece of birch bark was carefully folded several times and bitten. The bark was then unfolded and a pattern was revealed. Sometimes this was repeated on the same piece of bark several times. These earlier birch bark bitten designs are the ancestors of the later birch bark cutout patterns that are used in creating beadwork and quillwork designs. New materials will continue to be introduced, but it still goes back to those bitten patterns.
--Anthony White
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