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materials:Yak Hair & Sheep Wool
Yaks provide three kinds of hair. All are used by nomads in their dailylife, for various purposes. The coarsest is belly hair, and is used to make tent fabric and cushions for yak-saddles. The medium-grade is from the sides and back of the yak, and is used to make saddlebags, storage covers, and blankets. The softest grade We have recently come across an area in the south-western part of Kham that uses a fourth kind of yak-hair –- the shed baby hair of year-old yaks. This hair is fuzzy and covers the body of a baby yak. When spun and woven, it is finer and softer than medium-grade adult back hair, though not as soft as the neck hair.
Wool is spun and woven into cloth, just as yak-hair is. It is a medium grade between the softest and medium yak-hair. Nomads in some lower altitude areas keep sheep, and those Both yak and wool cloths can be washed and worked to add thickness and fuzziness. Yaks also produce thick leather. This leather is traditionally cleaned and then cured with yak-butter. You will find that this kind of leather arrives with an Yak horns are used sometimes for buttons. Stiff reeds are used for strengthening bowl and bell covers. Finally, there are bits and pieces of other things, bought in town -- metal buttons, bits of brocade, stretches of brightly colored cotton string. We hope you enjoy your look at these things! |
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