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Dress; NLaka'pamux, acquired 1915; skin, paint. CMC II-C-398
The fabric for skin clothing came from the large hides of deer, elk and moose. When scraped clean of fur, they were softened and smoked in a lengthy tanning process.
Dresses such as this, made from two deerskins, were used by some women in the winter time, sometimes as an overdress (instead of a robe) to cover a buckskin dress. Heads of skins were stitched to the body and painted with designs in red.
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On one side, the designs represent "sky line", "earth line with trees", and "two men meeting"; elders have recently suggested that the two figures are possibly a hunter and deer. On the other side, "earth line", "snakes", and "earth line with tree". The long line with cross lines is a "large tree".
The dress is ornamented with fringes and three notched lines cut in the hair. Its sides are laced up with skin thongs.
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