-
Retrieved 20
March 2021. Lynch, Kate. "From
cradle to grave:
willows and
basketmaking in Somerset". BBC.
Retrieved 2008-05-09. Seymour, John (1984). The Forgotten...
-
Yeoman memberships for
working basketmakers and
works closely with the
basketmaking trade through the
Trade Advisor and
Trade Committee. The
Company has...
-
fishing Weaving (mythology)
Basket weaving Lobster pot
Woven Communities,
Basketmaking Communities in Scotland, 2017 University of St Andrews and Scottish Basketmakers'...
- that are
highly toxic.
Jatropha species have
traditionally been used in
basketmaking,
tanning and dye production. In the 2000s, one species,
Jatropha curcas...
-
Basketmaking by
Pablita Velarde (Santa
Clara Pueblo),
casein painting on board. L 28.3 × W 28.3 cm,
Bandelier National Monument...
-
rappellers the
option of
using a
single or a
double rope. It is also used in
basketmaking. In heraldry, this knot is
known as
Savoy knot. In the
United States...
- osier) is a
strong flexible willow stem,
typically used in thatching,
basketmaking,
gardening and for
constructing woven wattle hurdles. The term is also...
- workers.
Pound Ridge became a
center of
basketmaking with 80
families emplo**** in the
trade at its peak.
Basketmaking was
concentrated in the present-day...
-
boost po****tions of
useful plant species such as
those for
medicine or
basketmaking.
Extensive logging of
redwoods began in the
early nineteenth century...
-
materials like
cedar bark.
Archaeology has
revealed some of the ways
basketmaking evolved over time, and the
Ozette Indian Village Archeological Site,...