| The weaving of baskets is as old as the history of man. Traces of
baskets have been found in the Egyptian pyramids, and woven basket liners
have left their impressions inside the fragments of ancient pottery.
As soon as man (and woman!) were able to plait fibers together, they
began to experiment with structures for woven containers.
Baskets were needed as containers for everything imaginable-
food, clothing, seeds, storage and transport. I always tell my students
that before Tupperware® and Samsonite®- we
had baskets!
So how did baskets travel from one part of
the world to another? With the explorers, of course. And this is how the
various techniques of baskets also traveled to other parts of the world.
As the explorers arrived in new lands,
they traded goods. The goods were contained in baskets- thus, as the
recipient of the goods looked over the basket, he/she then applied that
technique to the materials of their own land. This explains how so many
Asian techniques- like hexagonal weaves- are found in European baskets,
and how European techniques were then carried over to the Americas.
Thus, the basic types of basket weave
patterns can be applied to grasses, trees and other natural fibers
worldwide.
Coiling is a technique of winding
up the fiber like a snake while stitching it every quarter of an inch or
so. The inner coiled material was usually grasses and the sewing material
might be a stronger grass or stripped down tree fibers. The Native
Americans of the Southwestern states of the US have long perfected coiling
with grasses. Their wrapping usually covers the inner grasses completely.
Coiling with sweetgrass is done in
West Africa, and those techniques arrived in this country with the African
slaves. Today sweetgrass baskets are still woven in the eastern US coastal
states. Yet another kind of coiled basket is woven from pine needles- the
longer the better. These baskets are popular in Florida and the
Northwestern US. Usually they're sewn with raffia. (Raffia is the fiber of
the Madagascar palm tree- very soft, waxy and easy to sew with.)
Splint weaving is the technique of
weaving with flat materials. In Asia, these are made with reed and cane,
the products of the vine calamus rotang, which grows in the
rainforest of Indonesia. The vines are cut, transported by barge to ports
where they are then exported to China for processing into the smooth coils
of cane and reed. The cane is from the bark and the reed is from the core
of the vine. So, in much the same way that trees become lumber, calamus
rotang becomes reed and cane.
Note: It doesn't harm the rain forest to
harvest these fibers. They grow up into the trees and are pulled out of
the trees without cutting down the trees.
Splint weaving in Europe and the Americas
is done today with reed and cane, but also with the traditional fibers of
years past: oak, ash and hickory. Trees are cut down, soaked in water,
then finally split open and "peeled" from the inside to make
weavable strips.
Round fibered weaving is done with
a tremendous variety of fibers. The previously mentioned reed and cane are
processed into round sizes as well as flats. Willow, honeysuckle,
grapevine, Virginia creeper and many other sturdy durable vines have been
uses for centuries to weave baskets. The deciding factor is: will the
fiber bend enough to be woven, and will it tolerate the abuse of being
handled as a basket?
What kinds of new fibers are being used
today? Traditional styles and materials are always continuing.
However, innovative basketweavers are always experimenting with fibers of
the new age. Newspapers, aluminum, plastics, steel, paper, -you name
it- if it's flexible, someone has probably woven it into a basket. After
all, if you were stranded on a deserted island, wouldn't you, too, learn
to weave with whatever was there?
©2001 Linda Hebert - Feel free to
use the above as a research source. However, republishing in any form is
not allowed without permission of the author.
contents©2001 Linda Hebert
Linda Hebert
V. I. Reed & Cane
www.basketweaving.com
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