Happy Saturday Beautiful! 💙 I hope your day is bright and full of joy, just like this new Andean belt that I've just listed.⠀ ⠀ 💙🦋💙⠀ ⠀ #naturebeads #andeantextiles

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Happy Saturday Beautiful! 💙 I hope your day is bright and full of joy, just like this new Andean belt that I've just listed.⠀ ⠀ 💙🦋💙⠀ ⠀ #naturebeads #andeantextiles
An alpaca among colorful Andean textiles
Alpaca Pictures #alpaca #AndeanTextiles #heritage #culture #painting #vibrantcolors #art #tradition #Andes #Peru
🧵 Textiles of Time: The Threads That Tell Cusco’s Story
In Cusco, colors are not decoration—they are language. Every thread, every weave in an Andean textile carries a message. It’s how the highland people remember without writing. It’s how they sing without sound. 🧶🌈
Weavers in the Sacred Valley say that time lives in the loom. Their hands move with the memory of grandmothers and stars. Patterns tell of lakes and llamas, of gods and eclipses. A red thread may honor the sun. A black one may hold mourning. These are visual prayers, coded knowledge worn proudly.
In the markets, you’ll see these cloths folded neatly. But don’t rush. Ask the story. Every poncho, every faja, every chumpi belt was made with sacred intention. Alpaca and sheep wool spun with coca-chewed breath and moonlit dye baths. Nothing is random. Everything speaks.
When you wear one, you carry more than beauty—you carry culture, resilience, and the quiet poetry of a people who weave identity into everything.
Source: IncaTrail
The sky takes on shades of orange during sunrise and sunset, the color that gives you hope that the sun will set only to rise again. ⠀ ~ Ram Charan⠀ ✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨⠀ This Andean Belt - Trim is online now and it is so BEAUTIFUL! The color combination is perfect for any fall inspired project you have and it can be worn as it is around the waist. Check it out at the link in profile for this and more ethnic sourced and curated global goods.⠀ 🍁✨🌰✨🍂⠀ #naturebeads #andeantextiles
The cosmic textile
‘The textile is one of a number of interchangeable objects any one of which can be used metaphorically to provide a model of an Andean cosmos. These objects, which include the human frame, the textile, the loom, the house, the patio, and the village square form a concentrically expanding series. The textile centre is related to its edges and textile terminology, like that of the house, allows its structure to express degrees of kinship which extend outwards from original ancestor through direct male and female descent lines towards affinal kin.’
Lyndsey Crickmay, Space, time and harmony : symbolic aspects of language in Andean textiles with special reference to those from Bolivar Province (Cochabamba, Bolivia).
"The men's tunic (uncu) was highly standardized in format, dimensions, and construction during the period of Inca sovereignty. Uncus were made of interlocked tapestry with cotton and the wool-like yarn derived from camelids (llama, alpaca, guanaco, and vicuña). The finest cloth (cumbi) was woven by specialists and reserved for the ruler and for rituals.Tunics from various provinces of the Inca Empire were woven in patterns of local origin, such as the eight-pointed "star" characteristic of the far south of Peru. The most common format was a solid or patterned grid. Texts and images by Spanish chroniclers describe Inca soldiers dressed in tunics resembling a checkerboard, symbolic of the Inca administration.The double-side tunic illustrated here is a composite of Inca and European structure and symbolism. In format the V-shaped, stepped yoke is Inca, and the tunic is finely woven in the standard Inca tapestry technique. It is decorated with tocapu—the square geometric patterns associated with elite lineage, rank, or profession. Distinctive European modifications are the contrast between the front and back designs, which in Inca times were identical, and the incorporation of silver metallic thread, not used in Andean textiles before the arrival of the Spanish."
http://www.lacma.org/andean-uncu