When autocomplete results are available use up and down arrows to review and enter to select. Touch device users, explore by touch or with swipe gestures.

Fiber

521 Pins
 41w
Collection by
Similar ideas popular now
Weaving
Textile Art
Fiber Art
Textiles
"Tower in Orange and Green" 1922 Paul Klee. Watercolor, ink, and graphite on paper, bordered with ink, mounted on cardboard; 10⅞ x 5⅜ in. (27.6 x 13.7 cm) Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Modern Art, Contemporary Art, Paul Klee Art, Paul Klee Paintings, Art Moderne, Art Abstrait, Art Graphique, Metropolitan Museum Of Art, Quilt Inspiration
"Tower in Orange and Green" 1922 Paul Klee. Watercolor, ink, and graphite on paper, bordered with ink, mounted on cardboard; 10⅞ x 5⅜ in. (27.6 x 13.7 cm) Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
Japanese Vintage Folk Craft Mino Made of Rice Straw Straw Crafts, Vintage Textiles, Vintage Japanese, Boho Shorts, Vintage Art, Crochet Top, Folk, Hand Weaving
Japanese Vintage Folk Craft Mino Made of Rice Straw
Shepherds from the north in their traditional heavy woolen mantles as they get ready to shear sheep. Iran, circa 1952 Old Photos, Vintage Photos, Mantel, Wooly Bully, Mode Costume, Modelista, People Of The World, Traditional Dresses
Shepherds from the north in their traditional heavy woolen mantles as they get ready to shear sheep. Iran, circa 1952
Charles Fréger began a photography project exploring Japan’s masked ritual figures. Yokai, oni, tengu and kappa, which can be translated as ghosts, monsters, ogres and goblins, are ritual figures imagined by man and embodied during festivals and ceremonies as an attempt to tame the elements and find meaning in natural events. Juxtapoz Magazine - Japan's Ritual Ghosts, Monsters, Ogres and Goblins Ogre, Charles Freger, Magazine Japan, Pagan Rituals, Local Festivals, Art Populaire, Scary Monsters, Art Costume, Festival Costumes
Charles Fréger began a photography project exploring Japan’s masked ritual figures. Yokai, oni, tengu and kappa, which can be translated as ghosts, monsters, ogres and goblins, are ritual figures imagined by man and embodied during festivals and ceremonies as an attempt to tame the elements and find meaning in natural events. Juxtapoz Magazine - Japan's Ritual Ghosts, Monsters, Ogres and Goblins
PFINGSTHL: The tradition of “Pfingsthltäg”, or Greenman’s Day, is still going strong in small enclaves in the hinterlands of rural Germany. After the Pfingshtl parades through the village, children leave sheets of hoof lettuce before the tuere, on which they find “Pfingstbrezel” (Greenman’s Pretzel) in the morning. These strange creatures originated in pagan times and gradually became adopted by the church as part of the celebrations for pentecost, symbolizing spring’s defeat of winter. Beltane, Enclave, Weird Creatures, In The Tree, Green Man, Pagan
PFINGSTHL: The tradition of “Pfingsthltäg”, or Greenman’s Day, is still going strong in small enclaves in the hinterlands of rural Germany. After the Pfingshtl parades through the village, children leave sheets of hoof lettuce before the tuere, on which they find “Pfingstbrezel” (Greenman’s Pretzel) in the morning. These strange creatures originated in pagan times and gradually became adopted by the church as part of the celebrations for pentecost, symbolizing spring’s defeat of winter.
Museum of Witchcraft Diary: Skekler costume on loan Irish Customs, Rain Cape, Illuminated Manuscript, Silhouette, Archetypes, Banksy, Character Illustration
Museum of Witchcraft Diary: Skekler costume on loan
Africa | Chief's hat from the Ekonda people of northwestern DR Congo | Vegetal fiber, natural pigments and brass disc | ca. early 1900s | Price on Request African Crown, African Hats, Sombrero Hut, Statues, Ethnographic Art, African Textile, Dr Congo
Africa | Chief's hat from the Ekonda people of northwestern DR Congo | Vegetal fiber, natural pigments and brass disc | ca. early 1900s | Price on Request
Monika Ettlin
Monika Ettlin
Rain cape, rice straw, bast fiber, cotton, China, mid 20th century Textile Museum, Art Textile, Fiber Art, Crochet
Rain cape, rice straw, bast fiber, cotton, China, mid 20th century