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Start Over You searched for: Donor Samuel A. Barrett Remove constraint Donor: Samuel A. Barrett Accession number Acc.291 Remove constraint Accession number: Acc.291 Function 1.5 Household Remove constraint Function: 1.5 Household

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Hearst Museum object titled Acorn meal basket, accession number 1-11959, described as Globose coiled basket.  Tag: "Yuki". Per Ralph Shanks:  Coiled globose basket bowl.  There are no abrasions or residue. The basket has a tight spiral coiled start with small hole in center, not pinhole start however. The starts wefts are unpeeled redbud.  The coil foundation is three rod peeled shoots.  The wefts are peeled redbud background with unpeeled redbud designs.  The design is eleven horizontal one coil row wide bands of redbud.  There are a few small random rectangles.  The rim is plain wrapped; the rim coil ending is slightly tapered with five diagonal back stitches.  The weft fag ends are concealed, with some clipped or tucked.  The weft moving ends are primarily concealed with some tucked.  The exterior of the basket has a few split stiches; the interior has more than 50% split stiches.  The basket has an exterior workface, with a rightward work direction, and down to the right slant of weft twist.  There is one hair woven into the basket.  Note with basket in Larry Dawson's handwriting "Closure of lines line = ~ [about] 40A coil ending no dau marks".  Per Ralph Shanks Dawson was looking for dau marks in this basket.
Hearst Museum object titled Acorn meal basket, accession number 1-11960, described as Globose coiled basket.  Tag: "Yuki". Per Ralph Shanks:  Coiled globose basket bowl.  There are no abrasions or residue. The basket has a tight spiral coiled start with indentation and a small hole in the center, but not pinhole start however. The start's wefts have three rows of unpeeled redbud.  The coil foundation is three rod peeled shoots.  The wefts are peeled redbud background with unpeeled redbud designs.  The design is diagonal lines with flags off the top and bottom of the lines, quail designs per informant.  There are no random rectangles.  The rim is plain wrapped; the rim coil ending is missing.  The weft fag ends are primarily clipped. The weft moving ends are primarily concealed.  The exterior of the basket has about 15% split stiches; the interior has over 90% split stiches.  The basket has an exterior workface, with a rightward work direction, and various slant of weft twist.  Based on the lack of random rectangles and Lizzie Chicken's background of being half-Yuki half-Wailaki this basket was woven in the style of Wailaki baskets.
Hearst Museum object titled Acorn meal basket, accession number 1-12038, described as Hemispherical coiled basket.  Tags:  "Yuki". Per Ralph Shanks:  Flaring and rounded coiled basket bowl, used, with food residue.  The wefts are closely spaced. The start is stitched over.  The coil foundation is a mix of splints and rods.  The wefts are peeled and unpeeled redbud.  The rim is plain wrapped with an inch long herringbone ending.  The designs are two coil wide horizontal bands with breaks in them, as well as random rectangles.  The basket has an exterior workface, a rightward work direction, and the majority of wefts have a down to the right slant of weft twist.  The weft fag ends are primarily concealed with some bound under.  The weft moving ends are primarily concealed.  The weft stitches are often split on the backface.
Hearst Museum object titled Basket, accession number 1-12064, described as Basket; coiled. Warp is Willow (Salix), weft is Redbud (Cercis occidentalis). Red pattern is Redbud. Very old coiled basket with three rod foundation.
Hearst Museum object titled Basket, accession number 1-12163, described as Per Ralph Shanks and Justin Underhill:  3 tags with cat #, 1 with Wailaki globular hanging(?) basket with cross warp start that has 4 warp rows on each side, stacked perpendicularly and wrapped diagonally in one direction. The warp and weft sticks are peeled shoots, basket is plain twined over 2 to 4 warp rows. At the rim there are 3 more closely spaced rows of plain twining. Warps are closely trimmed. A 2-ply piece of twine is tied around the weft rows of the rim, possibly intended to hang the basket. Uneven surface to the basket. Work direction is rightward, slant of weft twist is up and to the right. On interior of basket there are numerous warp sticks protruding. The basket appears to have been used.    Globose openwork basket.  In good condition.  Twill twining; 3 rows of close twining at rim; a 2-ply fiber string (aboriginal?) tied onto rim as a handle.
Hearst Museum object titled Basket, accession number 1-12014, described as Basket; coiled. Warp is Dogwood, weft is Redbud sapwood. Red pattern is Redbud bark.
Hearst Museum object titled Basket, accession number 1-11990, described as Hemispherical twined basket, said to have been used in leaching buckeyes.  Tag: "Yuki". Per Ralph Shanks:  Openwork basket, dome shaped.  The catalog card mentions both use as leaching basket and as a hat.  The warps are probably willow.  There are a few weft rows of possible split unpeeled redbud, as well as some material like willow roots.  The basket looks like it might of had a handle, there are two broken warps on the interior that the handle would have attached to.  The basket has a crossed warp start with two wefts in an x over it.  The basket is three strand twined.  The rim is trimmed.  The basket has an exterior workface, a rightward work direction, and an up to the right slant of weft twist.  The basket was collected from a Pit River woman, but does not appear to be from that area.  The start is unusual with a design element present that is not found in Yuki twined baskets.  The materials and techniques are not similar to Yuki baskets.  The start is similar to some Wailaki openwork baskets, but the materials and three strand twining are not present in the Wailaki baskets in the Hearst Museum collections.
Hearst Museum object titled Basket, accession number 1-11979, described as Very old much worn hemispherical, parching basket.  Two tags:  "Yuki" Per Ralph Shanks:  Coiled parching basket that has had broken bottom replaced with twined patch.  The patch was stitched on with a possibly non- native material.  The basket has food debris.  The warps are rods and splints. The basket has peeled redbud background wefts and unpeeled redbud design wefts.  The design is horizontal bands of unpeeled redbud.  The rim is missing.  The basket has an exterior workface.  There are many split stitches on the backface.  The weft fag ends are bound under, with the moving ends concealed.  The basket has a rightward work direction and a down to the right slant of weft twist.  The work direction, materials and techniques used in the basket are consistent with Yuki manufacture. The twined patch at the base of the basket is said to have been taken from an old Wailaki basket, per Samuel Barrett's informants.  The patch is plain twined with an up to the right slant of weft twist.  The wefts may be conifer root.  The warps are peeled shoot.
Hearst Museum object titled Basket, accession number 1-12065, described as Basket; coiled. Warp and weft are Willow (Salix). Red pattern is Redbud (Cercis occidentalis). Single rod foundation.
Hearst Museum object titled Basket, accession number 1-12024, described as Small open hemispherical basket said to have been used for leaching buckeyes.  Tag: "Yuki". Per Ralph Shanks:  Open twined buckeye leaching basket.  Used with wear.  The start is a crossed warped twined start.  The warp foundation is peeled shoots.  The wefts are of an uncertain material, with two possible bands of unpeeled redbud designs.  The basket is plain twined.  The rim is clipped.  The basket has an exterior work face, a rightward work direction, and an up to the right slant of weft twist.  Surviving buckeye leaching baskets are very rare.