An Aboriginal Presence
Flora Loutit
Flora Loutit, Métis
seamstress and artist, lived in Fort Chipewyan, Alberta in the
early 1900s. She made clothing in a decorative art tradition
that combined Dene techniques and materials with floral designs
introduced in the North by Métis traders and settlers in
the 1800s.
A journalist who visited Fort Chipewyan in
1908 described the Loutit family, and Flora Loutit's work:
"Mrs. Loutit... shoots moose, and smokes the hide
according to the ancient accepted mode. Coming home, she takes
the smoked hide and works upon it silk embroidery of a fineness
which would be the envy of any young ladies' seminary in Europe
or America. She weaves fantastic belts of beads and sets the
fashion for the whole north in chef d'oeuvres of the quills of
the porcupine."
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Jacket
Métis
Alberta
1905
Made by Flora Loutit
Caribou skin, silk ribbon and embroidery thread
Canadian Museum of Civilization, VI-Z-249, CD94-670-014
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