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Mountain House Press
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Mountain House Press
William Joseph "Dard" Hunter (19)
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Displaying 1 - 19 of 19
Hand beaten paper from Madoera, Java, from the book Primitive Papermaking in Mexico and the Pacific Islands
(1927)
by
Mountain House Press
,
William Joseph "Dard" Hunter
Hand moulded paper from Southern Shan States, from the book Primitive Papermaking in Mexico and the Pacific Islands
(1927)
by
Mountain House Press
,
William Joseph "Dard" Hunter
(a) An original specimen of moral paper from the region of Cholulu, Southern Mexico and (b) an original specimen of xalama paper from Southern Mexico, from the book Primitive Papermaking in Mexico and the Pacific Islands
(1927)
by
Mountain House Press
,
William Joseph "Dard" Hunter
(a) A facsimile of a section of a robe which was made of decorated bark-paper by the aborigines of Peru and (b) a facsimile of a sheet of old bark-paper from Panama which was used by Cocle Indians in lieu of cloth, from the book Primitive Papermaking in M
(1927)
by
Mountain House Press
,
William Joseph "Dard" Hunter
(a) A facsimile of a section of a robe which was made of decorated bark-paper by the aborigines of Peru and (b) a facsimile of a sheet of old bark-paper from Panama which was used by Cocle Indians in lieu of cloth, from the book Primitive Papermaking in M
(1927)
by
Mountain House Press
,
William Joseph "Dard" Hunter
(a) Javanese workers beating mulberry bark into sheets of deloewang paper in the perdikan-desa Tegalsari, near Ponorogo, Madioen and (b) a specimen of the bark of the paper mulberry (Broussonetia papyrifera), from which the fine deloewang papers of Java a
(1927)
by
Mountain House Press
,
William Joseph "Dard" Hunter
(a) The finest deloewang paper is made in the districts Amboenten and Waroe, Madoera, a small island north-east of Java proper and (b) this specimen, the crudest of deloewang papers, was beaten in Toenggilis of the desa Tjinoenoekhilir, Sadang, near Garoe
(1927)
by
Mountain House Press
,
William Joseph "Dard" Hunter
(a) An original specimen of Hawaiian pink-dyed bark-paper which was cut from a kapa moe, seven by nine feet and (b) old Hawaiian bark-paper which was taken from the same kapa moe as the specimen above, from the book Primitive Papermaking in Mexico and the
(1927)
by
Mountain House Press
,
William Joseph "Dard" Hunter
(a) A fine example of Hawaiian bark-paper from the time of King Lunalito (1839-1894) and (b) a facsimile of an old, finely-ornamented bark-paper from the Hawaii, from the book Primitive Papermaking in Mexico and the Pacific Islands
(1927)
by
Mountain House Press
,
William Joseph "Dard" Hunter
An example of early Hawaiian bark-paper which was produced by the use of a wooden beater (ie kuku) carved in the mole halua pupu design, from the book Primitive Papermaking in Mexico and the Pacific Islands
(1927)
by
Mountain House Press
,
William Joseph "Dard" Hunter
(a) A facsimile of an ancient piece of Tahitian bark-paper which was decorated by dipping ferns in vegetable dye and imprinting the object upon the sheet and (b) an actual specimen of hoopai-marked paper from the Island of Hivaoa, from the book Primitive
(1927)
by
Mountain House Press
,
William Joseph "Dard" Hunter
(a) An original example of bark-paper from the Island of Tubuai and (b) a sheet of old paper which was cut from a piece that originally contained forty-eight square feet, from the book Primitive Papermaking in Mexico and the Pacific Islands
(1927)
by
Mountain House Press
,
William Joseph "Dard" Hunter
(a) A reproduction of a portion of a bark-paper war garment which was fabricated by one of the tribes of North-east Borneo and (b) the bark-paper decoration of the Horne Islands is composed of innumerable cross lines in brown and black, from the book Prim
(1927)
by
Mountain House Press
,
William Joseph "Dard" Hunter
(a) A reproduction of a piece of ornamented bark-paper from Celebes and (b) a facsimile of a corner of a large piece of bark-paper which was beaten and decorated by the cannibalistic Melanesians who reside on the little-known Islands of New Hebrides, from
(1927)
by
Mountain House Press
,
William Joseph "Dard" Hunter
(a) A specimen of paper mulberry bark (pakoko) which has been prepared for pounding into sheets of paper and (b) this specimen shows the bark after many hours of beating, from the book Primitive Papermaking in Mexico and the Pacific Islands
(1927)
by
Mountain House Press
,
William Joseph "Dard" Hunter
(a) A specimen of Tongan bark-paper which was beaten, pasted, and decorated about fifty years ago and (b) a modern example of Tongan bark-paper which was beaten and decorated near Nukualofa, Tongatabu Island, from the book Primitive Papermaking in Mexico
(1927)
by
Mountain House Press
,
William Joseph "Dard" Hunter
An elaborately designed Fijian bark-paper which was decorated about thirty years ago, from the book Primitive Papermaking in Mexico and the Pacific Islands
(1927)
by
Mountain House Press
,
William Joseph "Dard" Hunter
(a) The specimen of white bark-paper (seavu) is ready for decorating and (b) an old decorated bark-paper (masi kesa) from Fiji, from the book Primitive Papermaking in Mexico and the Pacific Islands
(1927)
by
Mountain House Press
,
William Joseph "Dard" Hunter
(a) A specimen of unfinished Somoan bark-paper (lana siapo) which was beaten on the Island of Savaii and (b) an example of modern Samoan decorated bark-paper (faafeia), which was ornamented in an all-over pattern by the use of a carved board (upeti) and r
(1927)
by
Mountain House Press
,
William Joseph "Dard" Hunter