Yupik clothing

Discover Pinterest’s best ideas and inspiration for Yupik clothing. Get inspired and try out new things.
234 people searched this
·
Last updated 4d
Iñupiaq man’s parka  ca. 1900  Cape Nome, Alaska  Caribou, fox and wolf skins, wool, sinew  134 x 131 cm  Purchased from the Fred Harvey Company  6/3308 Inuit Clothing, Fox And Wolf, Inuit People, Native American Clothing, First Peoples, Animal Hide, Clothes Pattern, Native American History, Mountain Man

Infinity of Nations: Art and History in the Collections of the National Museum of the American Indian is a spectacular, permanent exhibition of some 700 works of Native art from throughout North, Central, and South America. This exhibition will demonstrate the breadth of the National Museum of the American Indian's renowned collection and highlight the historic importance of many of these iconic objects.

1.9k
Koryak people of Kamchatka: woman's coat/dress for a festive occasion Siberian Clothing, Culture Fashion, Folk Dresses, Old Fashion, Folk Costume, Historical Clothing, Historical Fashion, Mode Inspiration, Ethnic Fashion

Hello All, I have been doing some looking around dance videos on U tube, and i keep running across various dances by native siberian peoples. Although they look very similar, they are attributed to different national groups. I have recently figured out that many of them actually represent one group, the Koryak, and perhaps the Itelmen. These are two seperate, but closely related peoples, The Itelmen live on the main body of the Kamchatka peninsula, and the Koryak live on the ithsmus that…

599
The upper body was sewn from arctic ground squirrel pelts and the rounded lower apron is white reindeer or caribou fur. The dark trim and tassels are wolverine fur and the hood has a wolf hair ruff. Inuit Clothing, National Museum Of Natural History, Dark Trim, White Reindeer, Inuit Art, Museum Of Natural History, Native American Art, First Nations, National Museum

Aanama qanrutellruanga tamakucineng-gguq aturlallruukut-llu wangkuta. (My mom told me that we used to wear that kind)… Tamana tua tangerrsugnarqellra pitekluku quyaklallruat. (They were thankful that they were so pretty.) - Joan Hamilton, 2002 This is a northern-style woman’s fancy parka, a type made by both the Iñupiat and by Yup’ik residents of southern Norton Sound to

401