Embroidery Hmong

Handmade Bags, Embroidered Antique Fabric & Bohemian-Chic Style
Handmade bags are all the hype these days. Designer is great, don’t get me wrong, but there is nothing like a one-of-a-kind handmade bag with hand-stitched leather and patches of colorful embroidery. No two handmade bags are the same and their designs are often inspired by the craftsmen who make them. So if you’re looking for a chic conversation piece you can carry around with you, try making your own handmade bag or buying one from a talented craftsman. Your handmade bag will be sure to have a one-of-a-kind story you can wear on your arm on your next night out.
Many of these handmade bags incorporate colorful antique fabrics into their designs. This is a clever and creative way to reuse old fabrics, many of which are magnificent works of art. Antique fabrics were handmade by women weavers long before machines were around to do the work for them. Textiles were hand-dyed, hand-woven and hand-embroidered by the women in the families and often passed down from mothers to daughters for generations.
Antique Japanese kimono and Hmong tribal costumes from mountainous regions of Asia are some of the most exquisite embroidered fabrics being incorporated into today’s trendy, bohemian-chic handmade bags.
In Japanese culture, traditional kimono designs were rich in cultural, political, social and religious symbolism. The colors, patterns and particular motifs of a kimono were carefully selected to articulate the wearer’s status in society as well as his/her personal virtues and desired attributes. In wedding ceremonies and other celebrated festivals kimono symbolism was used to confer blessings, well-wishes and good fortune.
Today, Hmong costumes are still a very important part of Hmong culture. At a very early age, young girls begin learning the elaborate needlework and traditional designs needed to create each Hmong costume. This skill is valued so highly in Hmong culture that a woman’s desirability to a suitor is measured by the beauty and intricacy of her needlework. A different costume is made for each milestone event in Hmong culture. The finest, most ornate work is reserved for marriage and death. The celebration of the New Year is also a significant event, and fresh new costumes must be worn as an auspicious welcoming of the new year.
Patches of these colorful, hand-woven and hand-embroidered intricate works of antique art create a chic contrast when hand-stitched onto leather and hemp fabric contemporary handbags and purses. These works of art are traditionally passed down from generation to generation, making them rare finds in the fashion world. You certainly won’t find many of these handmade embroidered bags on a department store rack, if any at all.
Handmade bags with unique, antique embroidery are truly one-of-a-kind. Within each patch of antique fabric are generations of family, culture and tradition. How’s that for a conversation piece?
About the Author
Incredibly Handmade is a one of a kind shopping site with unique handmade bags, embroidered bags and other handmade accessories from around the world. Feel free to visit our online store at http://www.incrediblyhandmade.com/
Ethnic hmong or miao embroidered textile art
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CAPS BLACK EMBROIDERY LOVE ME , I SPEAK HMONG This cap is great. All our items are of high quality. This cap is a perfect gift…. |
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Dia’s Story Cloth $3.00 FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. The story cloth made for her by her aunt and uncle chronicles the life of the author and her family in their native Laos and their eventual emigration to the United States…. |
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Dia’s Story Cloth: The Hmong People’s Journey of Freedom, translated in White and Green Hmong Dialects: Diav Daim Paj Ntaub Dab Neeg / Dlav Dlaim Paaj Ntaub Lug Nruag $6.95 Dia Cha’s story is shared by many Hmong Americans who made a long journey to freedom. The story cloth stiched by her aunt and uncle describes the Hmong people’s long and dangerous journey. For Hmong people, story cloths are a bridge between past and present. For all Americans, Dia’s Story Cloth is a universal story of the search for freedom. This bilingual edition is part of the Hmong Translatio… |
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One Needle, One Thread: Miao (Hmong) embroidery and fabric piecework from Guizhou, China $76.00 … |
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