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Loom with Textile

National Museum of Natural History

Object Details

Donor Name
Gov William F. Arny
FROM CARD: "WITH SAMPLES OF WORK." SEE RELATED OBJECTS CAT. NOS. 16495 AND 16496. THIS IS ACTUALLY A CURIO LOOM WITH AN AMERICAN FLAG RUG/SAMPLER STILL ON THE LOOM. SEE NATIONAL ANTHROPOLOGICAL ARCHIVES PHOTO NEG. # 2391 / NAA INV 06665800, PHOTO OF JUANITA PALTITO, WIFE OF MANUELITO, WITH CAT. #16494, AND ALSO NAA PHOTO NEG. # 2405 / NAA INV 06396900, PHOTO OF JUANITA AND W.F.M. ARNY WITH CAT. #16494. BASED ON THESE PHOTOS, JUANITA IS PRESUMED TO BE THE WEAVER OF THE TEXTILE. ARNY ACCOMPANIED THE NAVAJO DELEGATION OF 1874 (DEC. 1874 - JAN. 1875) TO WASHINGTON. JUANITA (Navajo name Asdzáá Tl'ógí, "Weaver Woman", 1845-1910) ACCOMPANIED HER HUSBAND NAVAJO LEADER MANUELITO (1816-1894), WHO WAS A MEMBER OF THE 1874 DELEGATION. BOTH PHOTOS WERE TAKEN BY CHARLES M. BELL IN BELL'S STUDIO ON PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE, DURING THE 1874 DELEGATION VISIT TO WASHINGTON, D.C. - F. PICKERING AND PAULA FLEMING 7-27-2000 SEE ALSO NATIONAL ANTHROPOLOGICAL ARCHIVES PHOTO OF JUANITA NAA INV 09842000. SEE ANTHROPOLOGY COLLECTIONS LAB ACCESSION FILE FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON JUANITA.
Information from "Textiles of the American Southwest" webpage entry on this artifact, http://www.smithsonianeducation.org/textiles/english/catalog/e016494.htm : Curio loom with unfinished weavings. Probably made by the Navajo weaver Juanita in New Mexico and brought from Fort Defiance with the Navajo delegation of 1874. Dimensions: 35.5 in. (warp including wooden rods) x 17.75 in. (weft). Technique: Tapestry weave. Thread count: Warp = 14/in.; Weft = 24/in. Fibers: Warp = 3-ply commercial wool yarn, natural white, light green, gold, and red, S-twist, Z-spin. Weft = 3-ply commercial wool yarn, natural white, light green, gold, red, blue, and black, S-twist, Z-spin. Selvages, warp and weft = 3-ply commercial wool yarn, gold, Z-twist, S-spin. Design: The upper weaving represents a U. S. flag with 13 red and whites stripes with 1 blue and 3 white crosses (stylized stars) floating on the red stripes. One corner is blue with 35 crosses (or stylized stars). The lower weaving has 7 red and white stripes along the bottom half and on top, a pattern of zigzags in black, gold, blue, white, light green, and red.
Blanket is described on p. 99 of Denetdale, Jennifer Nez. 2007. Reclaiming Dine' history: the legacies of Navajo Chief Manuelito and Juanita. Tucson: University of Arizona Press: "Textile scholar Kate Kent Peck [sic, should be Kate Peck Kent] names this textile as one of the first pictorials woven by a Navajo woman. Incomplete, half of the textile depicts the American flag; the other half is an "eye-dazzler," so named for its brilliant colors. Navajo women began weaving eye-dazzlers only after gaining access to brightly colored yarns manufactured after 1868." Denetdale is the great-great-great-granddaughter of Manuelito and Juanita.
Per the online exhibit "Navajo Weaving at Arizona State Museum: 19th Century Blankets; 20th Century Rugs; 21st Century Views", http://www.statemuseum.arizona.edu/exhibits/navajoweave/historic/eye_dazzlers.shtml, retrieved 1-30-2015: "During the Transitional Period ... from blanket-making to rug-weaving, Navajo weavers often applied bright commercial dyes to their handspun wool or used brilliantly colored commercial yarns in their rugs. Borrowing from the elaborate serrate diamonds of Mexican Saltillo sarapes, they created eye-dazzling geometric designs with this new color palette. Such "eye dazzlers" were popular with trading posts and tourist buyers."
https://www.si.edu/object/loom-textile:nmnhanthropology_8345504
Record Last Modified
1 Apr 2025
Specimen Count
1
Culture
Navajo (Diné)
Accession Date
12 Jan 1875
Accession Number
003675
USNM Number
E16494-0
Object Type
Loom / Blanket
Place
New Mexico, United States, North America
See more items in
Anthropology
NMNH - Anthropology Dept.
Topic
Ethnology
Record ID
nmnhanthropology_8345504
Metadata Usage (text)
CC0
GUID (Link to Original Record)
http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/365ac3d1f-584b-442a-afb6-186097418282
There are restrictions for re-using this image. For more information, visit the Smithsonian's Terms of Use page .
International media Interoperability Framework
IIIF provides researchers rich metadata and media viewing options for comparison of works across cultural heritage collections. Visit the IIIF page to learn more.
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