Moqui Stripe Patterns

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Moqui striped blanket

Banded Navajo blankets from the nineteenth century closely resemble Pueblo antecedents. They are woven longer-than-wide, with varied rhythms of striping and color combinations. One common banded style is the so-called Moqui stripe, named with an alternative (and archaic) term for the Hopi Indians. Curiously, little evidence shows Hopis (Moquis) actually weaving or wearing this style, although it was a standard Spanish-American blanket pattern as well as one popular in the Pueblos of New Mexico.

This style used zones of repeated narrow blue and brown-black banding as its basis. These zones might alternate with plain white or other colored bands. In later versions, weavers superimposed bold red triangles, diamonds, and other motifs on the banded “background.”

Above:
Moqui striped blanket
ca. 1880-18885
Tapestry weave, interlocked joins
1.285 x 1.715 m
67.52 x 50.591 in.
Catalog No. 22080
Collected by General John Logan
Donated by his grandson in 1937

 

“A lot of the old-time weavers unraveled the Rio Grande rugs or sarapes and then rewove them Navajo style. People preferred Navajo blankets to Mexican or Hispanic sarapes, because the Navajo weaving was much tighter and heavier. Some patterns like this probably came from Rio Grande sarapes.” —Barbara Ornelas

“This is like a kid on school picture-taking day—all shiny and bright, spit and polish. The background is busy, having the diamonds ‘clean’ keeps you from feeling overwhelmed.” —Sierra Ornelas

“This weaver was comfortable and knew what she was doing with her patterns. There’s a general flow. It’s bold, but also seems calm to me. The weaving was done in peace and harmony.” —Barbara Ornelas

“The weaver unraveled and rewove a rough-textured commercial American flannel. She used a serrate diamond pattern common in the Rio Grande area of New Mexico.” — Ann Hedlund

FunctionFiberTypePly-Spin-TwistColorDyeCount *
WarpWoolHandspun--Z--WhiteNone9
WarpWoolHandspun--Z--Dk BrownNone9
WeftWoolHandspun--Z--BlackNone Blk+Native35
WeftWoolHandspun--Z--BlueIndigo35
WeftWoolHandspun--Z--WhiteNone35
WeftWoolRaveled--Z--Orange-RedSynthetic, Tested 200446
EcordWoolHandspun3zSBlueIndigo2
* threads/inch

 


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Moqui striped blanket

Moqui striped blanket
ca. 1875-1885
Weft-faced plain weave
1.315 x 1.81 m; Tassels 00.070 m
71.26 x 51.772 in.; Tassels 2.756 in
Catalog No. E-3264
Gift of Elizabeth Crozer Campbell, 1956; collected by donor’s father

 

“Moqui comes from a Spanish name for Hopi Indians. The term is used for blankets with alternating black and blue stripes, even though no blankets with this pattern have been proven to be Hopi. This blanket, with some lazy lines, is likely Navajo or Zuni and not Hopi.” —Ann Hedlund

“This is a ‘plain Jane,’ but we all really like it. I call these little dashed lines ‘ribbons’—that’s what my grandmother used to call them in English. She got the idea from that lace with the looped edges that you could buy a long time ago. I don’t know what others call them. I learned how to weave using these. She’d make me do lines of these, alternating two colors, and then solid ones.” —Barbara Ornelas

FunctionFiberTypePly-Spin-TwistColorDyeCount *
WarpWoolHandspun--Z--WhiteNone8
WeftWoolHandspun--Z--Lt Orange-RedSynthetic20
WeftWoolHandspun--Z--WhiteNone25
WeftWoolHandspun--Z--BlackNone Blk+Native28
WeftWoolHandspun--Z--BlueIndigo30
EcordWoolHandspun3zSBlueIndigo2
* threads/inch
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Moqui striped blanket 3

Moqui striped blanket
ca.1890-1910
Tapestry weave, interlocked joins
1.51 x 2.05 m
80.709 x 59.449 in
Catalog No. E-3275
Gift of Elizabeth Crozer Campbell, 1956; collected by donor’s father

 

“I come from the school of light and dark. In my book, I believe contrast makes the pattern come out better. The old styles, like this, use dark and dark together, giving a different feel. I’m sure there are reasons why they did that—I wish I knew what they were. Nowadays in rugs, there’s not that surprise element.” —Barbara Ornelas

“Trader J. L. Hubbell at Ganado encouraged weavers to make this popular pattern. He then offered it through his mail order catalogues at the turn of the 20th century. He also supplied weavers with 4-ply commercial yarns from a mill in Germantown, Pennsylvania.” —Ann Hedlund

“I get ‘pharmacy feelings’ about this piece [Michael’s father David is a pharmacist]. The ‘snakes’ along the sides are like those encircling the medical symbol—a caduceus.” —Michael Ornelas

FunctionFiberTypePly-Spin-TwistColorDyeCount *
WarpWoolHandspun--Z--WhiteNone9
WeftWoolGermantown4zSRedSynthetic56
WeftWoolGermantown4zSBlackSynthetic56
WeftWoolGermantown4zSDk BlueSynthetic56
WeftWoolGermantown4zSWhiteNone56
EcordWoolGermantown3(4zS)ZBlackSynthetic2
* threads/inch