BYT I ISSKUSTVO NASELENIIA VOSTOCHNOI SIBIRI
Institut Istor., Filos., Novosibirsk: 1975. Part II.186 pages, 111 drawings and 36 b/w and 17 color photographs--mostly of Russian (Siberian) peasant costume. Cloth cover. More
Institut Istor., Filos., Novosibirsk: 1975. Part II.186 pages, 111 drawings and 36 b/w and 17 color photographs--mostly of Russian (Siberian) peasant costume. Cloth cover. More
Institut Istor., Filos., Novosibirsk: 1971. 198 pages of text containing 57 figures (photographs and drawings of clothing, household objects, buildings, and other objects of material culture of these Siberian peoples. In addition there are 30 pages of color and b/w photographs and drawings of the same types of objects of..... More
Academy of Sciences USSR, Vol. 84. Institute of Ethnography, Moscow: 1963. 233 pages of text dealing with Siberian ethnography, 54 photographs of structures, clothing and other objects of material culture. Cloth cover. More
Juneau: Alaska State Museums, 1991. 174 pages, 30 pages of color photographs, 85 b/w photographs, 67 drawings, 1 map. More
Canadian Museum of Civilization: 1994. 136 pages, 13 color and 95 b/w photographs, 15 drawings, 2 maps. The history of Copper and Caribou Inuit clothing and personal adornment is traced via archaeological, written accounts of early explorers, traders, and anthropologists, as well as 20th century photographs and drawings of garments..... More
Copenhagen: 1914. [8], 255 pages (some uncut) of text containing 3 figures, plus 118 drawings of Arctic skin and leather clothing on two fold-out pages. More
Vancouver: 1997. xiv, 274 pages, 232 photographs, 20 drawings, 13 maps. Cloth cover. The first work to bring together information on circumpolar clothing, this volume will remain an indispensable reference source on the clothing of the Canadian Inuit and the clothing from other areas of the circumpolar world--northeastern Siberia, Alaska..... More
1902. 86 pages (some uncut) of text containing 21 figures, plus 33 leaves of b/w and color photographs and drawings of several hundred objects and designs. More
Stockholm and Gothenburg: 1972. 215 pages, 9 (unpaginated), approximately 500-550 drawings and photographs of Lapp objects of material culture, clothing, people, shamanic (?) paraphernalia, cave drawings, and fauna. There also are fifteen full-page color photographs of objects of material culture, several old maps and one contemporary double-page map. Cloth cover..... More
Canadian Museum of Civilization: 1995. 159 pages, approximately 200 color photographs and 65 color and b/w drawings of all aspects of Copper Inuit (central Canadian Arctic) life as lived in the early 20th century and their artifacts, clothing and household objects. Cloth cover. More
Canadian Museum of Civilization: 1994. 137 pages, 12 color and 84 b/w photographs, 14 drawings, 1 map. The first in-depth study of the clothing traditions of the Nlaka'pamux (called the Thompson River Indians by early explorers and settlers), a Salish speaking people of the southern British Columbia interior, this work..... More
Canadian Museum of Civilization: 1994. 134 pages, 13 color and 95 b/w photographs, 15 drawings, 2 maps. This study documents clothing made by the Dene, an Athapaskan speaking people of the Northwest Territory, from the late 18th century to the present day. The text contains an extensive discussion not only..... More
National Museum of Man, Ethnology Series, Paper No. 1, 1972. 92 pages, 27 pages of photographs and 8 pages of drawings, 2 maps. The traditional clothing of the Kutchin Indians, a northern Athapaskan people, is noted for its artistry and excellent craftsmanship and is seldom exhibited in those museums (thought..... More
Toronto: 1990. xvii, 198 pages (focusing on some 100 pieces of footwear, some more than 100 years old), 8 color and 97 b/w photographs, 19 drawings, 20 maps. Cloth cover. More
Fieldiana, Anthropology, New Series, No. 4: 1981. 86 pages, 35 photographs, 21 drawings. More
Fieldiana Anthropology, New Series, No. 32: 1994. iii, 71 pages, 35 full-page photographs, 8 full-page drawings, 1 map. The Field Museum's collection of 234 Copper Inuit ethnographic objects was collected in the Northwest Territories of Canada in 1919-1921 by Harold Noice. In 1925 Noice sold the entire collection to the..... More