Tuguegarao is the capital city of Cagayan province. There are a lot of historical places, museum, churches and natural wonders for any visitor or tourist visiting the place.
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Tuguegarao is the capital city of Cagayan province. There are a lot of historical places, museum, churches and natural wonders for any visitor or tourist visiting the place.
BALIWAG BUNTAL HAT
Some famous people & celebrities wears this hat.
According to the book “Baliwag Then and Now” by Rolando Villacorte, BUNTAL HAT weaving started in Baliwag sometime between 1907 and 1909 when Mariano Deveza brought to Baliwag bundles of coarse buntal fiber from his home town of Lucban, Quezon.
Back then, Lucban was the sole seat of the buntal weaving industry and could not cope with the large demand for the product. Baliwag was already famous for bamboo hat weaving.
Yesterday Lakad Pamana Dabarkads visited mam Rosie Bautista of Baliwag Buntal Enterprises, she said Deveza first brought the buntal fibers to the late Dolores Maniquis who became fascinated and experimented with it, softening the fibers using a heavy wooden roller.
Maniquis started weaving the pliant fibers into hats, and later experimented with colors by first bleaching and then dyeing the fibers.
Mam Rosie said that buntal hat weaving became a booming industry in this town by 1910, with at least one weaver in every household.
As the industry grew, specialization set in and improved production methods became standard practice.
According to her to finish a hat, four persons were needed.
The first weaver would take care of the hat’s crown or head, and the second weaver would make the brim.
The third weaver would finish or close the brim, while the fourth would bleach the yellowish fiber to make it more attractive.
By 1920, Baliwag BUNTAL HAT production became a major dollar-earning export, as it was sold in the world market and became known as the “Panama Hat.”
However, by the late 1920s, the industry suffered from cutthroat competition from China, as the Chinese started producing their version of BALIBUNTALS with raw materials imported from the Philippines.
She also said that in 1923, Chinese businessmen in Hong Kong hired Filipino weavers, and before the war, the industry was in virtual collapse.
However, after the war, the industry began to thrive anew under the Balibuntal Straw Hat outfit of the late Joaquin Villones, which had about 5,000 weavers and suppliers.
Records show that the Villones outfit manufactured about a quarter of the 40,000 total monthly production by the 1960s.
Today, buntal hat weaving continues to thrive here, but manufacturers like Mam Rosie are facing a serious lack of skilled manpower.
“We still have hundreds of weavers, but they mostly do it on part-time basis,” she said, adding that she started transferring the skill and technology to young workers through workshops and seminars. She said she is also willing help train detainees in different jails, interested housewives & students to learn how to weave, in order to help the industry survive.
Photo Credit: Batang Baliwag
Reference: PhilStar, Rosario Bautista Of Baliwag Buntal Enterprises