...market stalls extending down to the lake. Carrying things on your head is a special talent and one sees it all the time. Usually they have a little cloth wound up and placed on the head and then the object to be carried. The huipile being worn by the woman carrying stuff on her head is actually from Santiago, not Panajachel. She's a foreigner!
....caught after I learned to stay still and let them come to me. Again I think, given the huipiles and the head dress that these women are from Santa Catarina, next to Panajachel on the lake. These head pieces are a piece of velvet wound up with the hair and then tied to achieve the height in the front. These velvet colors against this beautiful jet black hair is fairly amazing.
....This is an entirely different thing. First of all the pants are long and embroidered from top to bottom, hand woven of course. And then he wears a sort of kilt thing that is woven from very heavy wool. You see this regularly up high in the mountains and very often worn without the pants.
...mother and daughter and tuk-tuks at the Panajachel market. Also notice how the seated woman is using her all purpose shawl to shade her from the sun. Also used to carry anything including babies, of course. And worn correctly otherwise folded and draped over one shoulder. The blue strips on her huipil would mean she is actually from Santiago.
...whops I think she caught me. I was trying to hide across the narrow street. This is the typical head dress from Santiago which I referred to in the post on the festival in Santiago. It is simply a band of red felt wrapped and wrapped until it forms a disk. If you could see closer you would also see that she has one of the striped huipiles from Santiago with their flower and or animal embroidery around the neck. The combination of the graphic strips and then the fantastic floral/animal stuff is really interesting.
Joe, every photo is a painting. Truly remarkable.
ReplyDelete- Stefanie