Loom
About this object
History of use
Loom for weaving wool robes and blankets. Traditionally, mountain goat wool blankets were worn as robes or used as bedding. The blankets were objects of status and used to compensate shamans or other specialists for their services. They were also distributed to those who witnessed weddings, naming ceremonies, and memorial rituals. The dead of wealthy families were wrapped in blankets. By the 1850s, Hudson's Bay (Company) point blankets, and other trade blankets were beginning to replace locally woven blankets.
Narrative
Acquired by the donor from an antiques shop on Vancouver Island, near Duncan. Said to have been left under a house where a First Nations family had previously lived.
Cultural context
weaving; textiles
Physical description
Blanket loom composed of four wooden parts. Two upright frame pieces (parts a-b) are relatively flat in profile, with three rectangular matching cutouts for the rollers, and the top of each tapering to a point. Two rollers (parts c-d) are cylindrical with thin cylindrical ends which insert into the cutouts in the frame.
Materials
Date Acquired
25 Apr 2018
How Acquired
Donated
Credit Line
Measurements
Overall: 172 cm x 165 cm x 13.5 cm
Object Number
3298/1 a-d