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Little Indian

July 20th, 2009

Tattoo Sleeves

Little Indian


Little Indian


Little Indian


$12.9


Little Indian Mug

Little Indian Top


Little Indian Top


$18.34


Little Indian top for the smallest member of you’re tribe!

little Indian bib


little Indian bib


$12.62


Bib fit for a boy o a girl or you’re little indian!

Little Elk, Plains Indian


Little Elk, Plains Indian


$24.99


Little Elk, Plains Indian Premium Poster by . Product size approximately 18 x 24 inches. Available at Art.com. Embrace your Space – your source for high quality fine art posters and prints.

One Little Indian


One Little Indian


$9.76


Rated: GSynopsis: In this comical Disney western, a cavalry rider goes AWOL in the midst of a raid to save the lives of a band of Indian women and children. He then takes off across the New Mexican desert astride a camel. En route, he meets a young white boy who was raised by an Indian. The Indian is trying to find his tribe and so enlists the aid of the wayward soldier. Later they encounter a widow and her daughter. Sandra BrennanPRODUCTION AND TECHNICAL NOTES:Aspect Ratio: Theatre Wide-Screen (1.85.1)Presentation: Wide ScreenSound: Dolby Digital MonoFeatures: French and Spanish language tracks; French subtitles; Dolby Digital Mono sound; Widescreen (1.85:1) enhanced for 16×9 televisionsLanguage: English, Français, EspañolSubTitles: FrançaisTime: 1 Hour 31 Minutes

Little+Indian


Pantry Moth Traps - Set of Two


Pantry Moth Traps – Set of Two


$4.90


Pro-Pest Pheronet Traps for Pantry Pests are our Pheronet Traps conveniently packaged in a 2 pack. The pheromones in Pro-Pest Pantry Traps will attract Indian Meal Moth, Almond, Raisin, Tobacco, and Mediterranean Flour Moths and Cigarette Beetles. Each package contains 2 traps. Take one or two traps out of the plastic sleeve, fold trap into a triangular trap. Since pheromones are pre-loaded in the…

Cuisinart DFP-3 Handy Prep 3-Cup Food Processor


Cuisinart DFP-3 Handy Prep 3-Cup Food Processor


$54.99


The Cuisinart Handy Prep Food Processor comes in a handy 3-cup size. The Chute Attachment and assortment of blades and discs provide plenty of slicing and shredding options. Make your food prep tasks a breeze with the Handy Prep from Cuisinart.3-cup to unlimited slicing-shredding capacityStainless steel chopping blade, slicing and shredding discsChute attachment for continuous slicing and shreddin…

Cuisinart MM-2M Mini Mate Chopper and Grinder


Cuisinart MM-2M Mini Mate Chopper and Grinder


$19.99


The Mini-Mate makes quick work of small kitchen prep jobs that might otherwise require difficult and messy chopping, grinding, and grating: nuts, nutmeg, and cinnamon sticks, peppercorns and seeds, garlic and anchovies, even chocolate and citrus peel. With a patented reversible blade for sharp or blunt processing, and two speeds of operation, it is well equipped to handle a variety of jobs. Though…

The Indian in the Cupboard


The Indian in the Cupboard


$4.56


Young Hal Scardino stars as a sensitive boy who discovers a way to bring plastic toys to life in a locked cupboard. One of those toys, a 19th-century Iroquois warrior (played by actor Litefoot), was actually a real warrior now only several inches tall. A bond eventually develops between boy and warrior, and a six-shooting toy cowboy (David Keith). As with E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, The Indian i…



Why Antique Indian Beadwork Are The Most Cherished Native American Collectibles

Native American collectibles are among the most coveted of historical collectors. Antique Indian beadwork is among the most collectible of the Native American collectibles. Before Native Americans used beads on their clothing, they painted them. Then, as time went on, they began to make beads out of bone, dried berries and eventually beads, which were introduced by European traders ultimately.

The Origins Of Antique Indian Beadwork

Just before the turn of the 18th century, traders from Europe came to America with glass beads to trade with the Native people. Since the traders actually carried these beads to Indian villages on ponies, these beads found in antique Indian beadwork are often called pony beads. The majority of these beads were blue and some were white and red as well. So, antique Indian beadwork took on a predominantly blue striped look with some reds and whites mixed in. And, this type of beadwork remained popular until the middle of the 19th century, when smaller beads began to become more plentiful and fashionable. Nowadays, it seems that just about every type of garment of Native American collectible features a bit of beadwork on it. The needle and thread wasn’t introduced to Native American cultures for many years and actually, what they used to apply beads to Native American collectibles was called a sinew. Sinew is dried tendon from large game like an elk or deer.

The Varities Of Antique Indian Beadwork

There are three main kinds of Indian beadwork found in Native American collectibles. They are:

The Overlay or Spot Stitching Variety

This particular type of antique Indian beadwork is easy to recognize for its curvy and floral patterns.

The Lazy Stitch

Known for its boxy and straight patterns, the lazy stitch is most commonly found in antique Indian beadwork from the Western side of the North American continent.

Beads Woven With Looms

The Ojibway Native American tribe is credited with originating this style of beading. As trading continued, the style become more popular across America. The loom used was very portable and easy to carry as tribes migrated as well. This loom, which was made to look like a bow, actually was made of a few pieced of flat wood and a sinew.

Still Popular Today

Since the styles are so coveted, modern hobbyists and entrepreneurs and even Indians themselves are still creating items in the antique Indian beadwork styles as a way to make a living. If you are a collector of Native American collectibles, you know full well that it’s imperative to have many pieces of antique Indian beadwork as part of your archive.

Visit this website for Vintage Indian Beadwork.



 India's Prisoner: A Biography of Edward John Thompson, 1886-1946


India's Prisoner: A Biography of Edward John Thompson, 1886-1946


$0.99


Used - Edward John Thompson -- novelist, journalist, and historian of India -- was a liberal advocate for Indian culture and political self-determination at a time when Indian affairs were of little general interest in England. As a friend of Nehru, Gandhi, and other Congress Party leaders, Thompson had contacts that many English officials did not have and did not know how to get. Thus, he was an excellent channel for interpreting India to England and England to India.Thompson first went to Indi

 India's Prisoner: A Biography of Edward John Thompson, 1886-1946


India's Prisoner: A Biography of Edward John Thompson, 1886-1946


$49.95


Edward John Thompson—novelist, poet, journalist, and historian of India—was a liberal advocate for Indian culture and political self-determination at a time when Indian affairs were of little general interest in England. As a friend of Nehru, Gandhi, and other Congress Party leaders, Thompson had contacts that many English officials did not have and did not know how to get. Thus, he was an excellent channel for interpreting India to England and England to India.Thompson first went to India in 1910 as a Methodist missionary to teach English literature at Bankura Wesleyan College. It was there that he cultivated the literary circle of Rabindranath Tagore, as yet little known in England, and there Thompson learned of the political contradictions and deficiencies of India's educational system. His major conflict, personal and professional, was the lingering influence of Victorian Wesleyanism. In 1923, Thompson resigned and returned to teach at Oxford.Interest in South Asia studies was minimal at Oxford, and Thompson turned increasingly to writing Indian history. That work, and his unique account of his experiences in the Mesopotamian campaign in World War I, supply a viewpoint found nowhere else, as well as personal views of literary figures such as Robert Graves and Robert Bridges. Thompson was also a major influence on the work of his son, E. P. Thompson, a modern historian of eighteenth-century England.This important biography covers politically significant events between Thompson's arrival in India and up to his death, and casts considerable light on Thompson and his struggles with his religion and his relationship with India. The first biography of E. J. Thompson, "India's Prisoner" will have widespread appeal, especially to those interested in South Asian and English history, literature, and cultural history.
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