Ta'giuqtigapta Tuapaktusu'gmi Immersion Camp: Iñupiaq Land Use Values and Resources Video: 54 seconds, MPG-1 format. The campers are setting up the cook tent by making some ice water and beginning the cooking. Charise Hallberg and Fannie Akpik...
Title from donor notes. Photograph shows David Frankson sitting at a kitchen table, weaving a baleen basket. Several finished baskets and some tools can be seen on the table.
Title taken from caption. Portrait of Anastasia Hodikoff of Attu in 1936. From May's journal, dated July 26th: "After church I got the Chief's wife to let me take a picture of her making an Attu basket. I think she rather liked the idea, for she...
Full title: Annu·garriu·gniq Ni·grutit Ami*niññiñ = Making clothing from animal skins / story in English and Eskimo by Harold Kaveolook ; illustrations, Harold Kaveolook.
Parallel title: Making clothing from animal skins...
Weaver works on a basket in her lap. Displayed are other baskets, a spruce root hat, and beaded fur moccasins. Verso: This art has now nearly disappeared. Spruce roots, grasses and twisted cedar bark were used, with split spruce roots making...
Title by cataloger. Photograph of children playing outside a cabin. Narrative in photo album reads: "Above are the Indian children industriously making mud pies. They play 'keep house' and many other games and are very fond of dolls."
Title from donor notes. Full donor notes read: "Jim VanStone making an oil-drum stove for his rented house (w/oversight by Bernard Nash)." The men appear to be in a workshop and tools can be seen hanging on the wall.
Title from donor notes. Photograph of Rev. Cox and Jack Tuzroyluk setting up a camp next to Kisimiloq mountain. Full donor notes read: "RJC (cutting out site for tent) & Jack Tuzroyluk making camp at Kisimaloq en route to Kivalina."
Additional comments from village presentations read: "They could be making fish traps under the ice or making a dam (blocking) for under-ice fishing. Blocking the channel diverts the fish."
39 second, color/silent film clip of men making babiche (hide rope). First, a man rinses the hide in a barrel, then in a large body of water. Two men then stretch and cut the hide into strips.