Knoxville Museum of Art:
Saki-ori obi, Woven rag textile; Japan; 20th century
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Saki-ori obi, Woven rag textile; Japan; 20th century
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Saki-ori obi, Woven rag textile; Japan; 20th century
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Saki-ori obi, Woven rag textile; Japan; 20th century
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Saki-ori obi, Woven rag textile; Japan; 20th century
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Saki-ori obi, Woven rag textile; Japan; 20th century
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Saki-ori obi, Woven rag textile; Japan; 20th century
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Saki-ori obi, Woven rag textile; Japan; 20th century
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Saki-ori obi, Japan Woven rag textile; Japan; 20th century
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Saki-ori obi, Woven rag textile; Japan; 20th century
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Saki-ori obi, Woven rag textile; Japan; 20th century
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Saki-ori obi, Woven rag textile; Japan; 20th century
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Saki-ori obi, Woven rag textile; Japan; 20th century
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Saki-ori obi, Woven rag textile; Japan; 20th century
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Saki-ori obi, Woven rag textile; Japan; 20th century
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Mashru (satin weave warp-faced) textile, Silk warp and cotton weft; Gujarat, India; 18th century
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Mashru (satin weave warp-faced) textile, Silk warp and cotton weft; Gujarat, India; early 19th century
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Oso Oke, Detail of women's wrapper cloth, cotton rayon and lurex; Oyo, Africa; 1996
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Oso Oke, Detail of women's head-tie cloth, cotton rayon and lurex; Africa; 1994
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Warp stripes in plain cotton weave, Huarmay, Coastal Tiahuanaco; ca AD 800
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Horizontal Yarta stripe cloth, Plain weave, cotton; Japan; 1801-1868, end of Edo period
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Stripe textile, Satin-weave silk; Japan; 1673-1750, mid-Edo period
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Ryo-komochi textile, Plain-weave silk, Mizu-Goromo type; Japan; 1673-1750, mid-Edo period
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Stripe textile
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Graduating shaded stripe textile, Plain weave cotton; Japan; end of Edo period, 1673-1750
Knoxville Museum of Art:
This Moqui-pattern serape dating to about 1860 was originally recorded as Hopi, but more likely was woven by Zuni. It contains a few barely recognizable lazy lines. The corner tassels are part of a recent repair; 68” x 47”
Knoxville Museum of Art:
This plain-weave white cotton manta, dating between 1920-25, has red inner borders woven in 3/1 diagonal twill and indigo blue outer borders in four-thread diamond twill; 38” x 45”
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Warp-faced plain weave and cross-warp border; Z-plied yarns occur frequently throughout textile; Alpaca; warp:93 cm, weft:93.5 cm; provenance unknown, Bolivia;19th century
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Llacota (mantle), post-Conquest or early Colonial period
Knoxville Museum of Art:
Huallas (ceremonial wedding mantle), 19th century