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Start Over You searched for: Object class Twined weaving Remove constraint Object class: Twined weaving Collector E. L. McLeod Memorial Collection Remove constraint Collector: E. L. McLeod Memorial Collection Culture or time period Central California Tribes Remove constraint Culture or time period: Central California Tribes

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Hearst Museum object titled Bottle basket, accession number 1-20926, described as Water bottle basket; twined. Warp and weft are Willow (Salix). Pitched with One Leaf Pine (Pinus monophylla). 2 loops on each side of bottle with carrying cord attached.
Hearst Museum object titled Bottle basket, accession number 1-20925, described as Water bottle basket; twined. Warp and weft are Willow (Salix). Pitched with One Leaf Pine (Pinus monophylla).  2 loops on each side of bottle with carrying cord attached.
Hearst Museum object titled Bottle basket, accession number 1-20927, described as Water bottle basket; twined. Warp and weft are Willow (Salix). Pitched with One Leaf Pine (Pinus monophylla).
Hearst Museum object titled Bowl basket, accession number 1-21019, described as Bowl basket; twined. Warp is Epicampes (Sporobolus rigens), weft is Willow (Salix). Red pattern is Redbud (Cercis occidentalis). With 2 bands of double zigzag lines, the upper one in red and black, the lower in black.
Hearst Museum object titled Bowl basket, accession number 1-20859, described as Bowl basket; twined. Warp is Willow (Salix), weft is Sedge (Carex). Red pattern is Redbud (Cercis occidentalis). In twined weave "cuset" triangular design in red.  Second origin. no. 323.
Hearst Museum object titled Bowl basket, accession number 1-20883, described as Bowl basket; twined. Warp is Epicampes (Sporobolus rigens), weft is string. Decorated with red and green woolen yarn in step design.
Hearst Museum object titled Bowl basket, accession number 1-21023, described as Bowl basket; twined. Warp is Epicampes (Sporobolus rigens), weft is Sedge (Carex). Red pattern is Yucca. White pattern is Redbud (Cercis occidentalis). Round, flat base, with 2 encircling bands enclosing butterfly pattern in black, white and red.
Hearst Museum object titled Bowl basket, accession number 1-20923, described as Bowl basket; twined. Warp and weft are Willow (Salix). Red pattern is Redbud (Cercis occidentalis).
Hearst Museum object titled Bowl basket, accession number 1-21039, described as Bowl basket; twined. Warp is Epicampes (Sporobolus rigens), weft is Sedge (Carex). Red pattern is Redbud (Cercis occidentalis). Black pattern is Brake fern (Pteris quilina). With 3 encircling bands of dancing human figures, 2 upper bands separated by a band of white hollow diamonds on a black and red background, broken on one side by a series of triangles superimposed one upon another with the apices down.
Hearst Museum object titled Bowl basket, accession number 1-20904, described as Flaring basketry bowl with black zigzag pattern.  Basket broken near rim.  Tag: "Yuki".  Second tag "40-A".  Third tag "92".  Fourth tag "No. 92 property of Mrs. George H. Taylor Fresno Cal.” Per Ralph Shanks:  Coiled flaring basket, possibly a cooking basket, with some residue and a burn at the base.  The basket has a twined start, currently with a hole.  The coil foundation is rod and splints of peeled shoots.  The background wefts are maybe sedge root (Carex) with brown/black plant material designs.  The design is diagonal stepped parallelograms.  There are no random rectangles. The rim is plain wrapped with rim ticks at one area of the rim.  The coil ending is tapered.  The weft fag ends are primarily concealed, with some clipped.  The weft moving ends are primarily concealed.   The exterior has below 10% split stiches.  The interior of the basket has over 90% split stiches.  The basket has an exterior workface with a leftward work direction and an up to the right slant of weft twist.   The leftward work direction, the up to the right slant of weft twist, and the materials do not fit with Yuki materials and techniques, they possibly fit with Huchnom materials and techniques, and otherwise the basket is attributable to the Yukian area based on the use of splints in the coil foundation.