Chapter XII: CLOTHING
PREHISTORIC COSTUME The ancient Navaho had very poor and
simple clothes in contrast to their well-dressed descendants. Women wore
merely a two-piece apron effect about the waist, woven from yucca fiber
or cedar bark, while men wore breechcloths. For cold weather, animal
skins or a woven yucca blanket were wrapped around the body. The feet
and legs were protected by yucca leggings and moccasins of badger or
wild-cat skin, which were soled with braided yucca.
COSTUME OF EARLY HISTORIC PERIOD At the beginning of the
Navaho historical period, about 1630, they were already tanning hides,
as Benavides states that the Navaho presented him with some dressed
deerskins. Buckskin became the characteristic material for men's
clothing until Bosque Redondo times. There seems to be no record of the
Navaho women wearing buckskin dresses. When they began to weave, they
discarded the primitive, yucca garments for woolen blanket dresses woven
on their looms.
There are numerous descriptions of Navaho clothing of this
pre-captivity period in the reports of travelers and government
officials. The interested reader who wishes details regarding the
manufacture of the clothes in the prehistoric and pre-captivity periods
and sketches or photographs will find them easily accessible in the
Ethnologic Dictionary and in Amsden's "Navaho Weaving."
Davis, a sympathetic observer of the Navaho in 1855, declared that
they dressed with greater comfort than any other tribe. Letherman, who,
like many army men of the time, deprecated the American idealization of
the Navaho, nevertheless describes the tribe as one which lived with a
certain degree of material comfort. He saw the men wearing short
breeches of brownish-colored buckskin or red baize (bayeta), closely
fitting, and buttoned at the knee. Davis noted that the outer seams of
the breeches were decorated with brass and silver buttons. The buckskin
moccasins and leggings of dyed deerskin were also adorned with buttons.
Blue leggings were held up with fancy woven garters of red.
The men made their own clothes and also knitted their own blue
legging stocks, as did the Hopi men. The Navaho man made a skirt from a
small blanket or a piece of red baize with a hole in it through which to
slip the head. He fastened a strip of red cloth over the shoulders to
form sleeves, then he sewed up the sides of the garment to the arm
holes, and fitted the shirt more closely about his body with a leather
belt heavily ornamented with silver discs. The shirt came below the
small of the back and covered the abdomen in front.
Necklaces, bracelets, buttons, and earrings of shell, silver,
brass, and coral added other colorful touches to the brown and red
ensemble of the Navaho man. The buckskin was sometimes ornamented with
embroidery of porcupine quills and beads. The Navaho did not do much of
this work themselves; they obtained it by barter from the Utes. The
embroidery was highly prized among the Navaho. For a coat, the versatile
native blanket, either with stripes or a diamond design of indigo blue,
bayeta red, black and white, was indispensable. The elaborate clothing
of the Navaho warrior has been described in the section on War.
The native woolen dress of the Navaho women is very interesting. It
was discarded after the return from Bosque Redondo, and now such a dress
is a valuable museum piece. Amsden (p.97) states that it was "one of the
most characteristically and completely native products of the Navaho
loom, the more so for the fact that unlike many Navaho textiles, it was
used only by the tribe that made it." He goes on to relate that it was
copied from the Pueblo women, who were wearing a similar type of dress
in cotton when the early Spanish explorers entered the Southwest .
The Navaho did not copy the Pueblo dress exactly; they wove two
small blankets instead of one, as did the Pueblo weaver. The two pieces
were fastened over the shoulders and sewed together from under the arms
almost to the hem, which came just above the ankle. (The Pueblo Women
exposed one shoulder as they fastened only a single shoulder seam.) At
first the body of the Navaho dress was in black or blue, and bordered
and tasseled in blue, with alternating stripes of black and blue at the
top and bottom. This somber and dignified garment became very gorgeous
when red bayeta was introduced. Stripes of red were added to the black
and blue, and the women wove small, geometrical designs of dark color
into the brilliant red background. A rod woolen sash, which might be
ornamented with silver discs and other jewelry, held the dress around
the waist. (See Plate VI, p.80.)
With this dress the women wore leggings of the kind still to be seen
of dyed buckskin, the skin being wrapped around the leg from ankle to
knee and adorned with flashing silver buttons. They wore many necklaces
and bracelets like the men; but until modern times one did not see a
married woman with earrings. The Navaho told Stephen (1893:356) that
when girls married they took off their earrings and added them to their
necklaces, because otherwise their husbands, when angry, might tear the
earrings out of the ears. This may be only a story; yet, knowing the
family and clan organization of the tribe, one's sympathies incline
toward the man when his domestic discipline had its inevitable
repercussions in his wife's family.
Both sexes wore their long hair in a fashion which is still
maintained: it is bound up in an hour glass shape at the back of the
head and tied with some woolen string. The hair is kept neat and shining
with a small whisk broom made of rushes. The men bind a bright bandana
or rag about their heads, sometimes tying a feather or a Navaho jewel
into it. The earrings are sometimes so large and heavy that they jerk
the ears painfully as the owner travels at his customary, break-neck
speed across the desert; generally, therefore, they are turned up over
the ears.
AFTER BOSQUE REDONDO When American forts were established in
Navaho territory before 1863, the wealthy tribesmen who came in contact
with the military officers began to wear coats and pantaloons of
American style. Then Bosque Redondo experience definitely changed the
styles and materials of clothing for the whole tribe. The buckskins and
woolens continued to be worn as late as 1890, but more and more they
were reserved for fiestas and chants, while cotton clothing made like
the garments of the Americans and the Spanish became the popular
fashion.
The tribe had always preferred to trade their blankets for the
buckskin tanned by the Utes; now, with the boom period of weaving under the
direction of traders in full swing, the blankets were sold at the
trading posts for cash or in exchange for cloth from American factories.
The women devoted their time to filling orders for blankets, and bought
material, instead of weaving it as formerly, for their own dresses.
Whatever the Navaho have learned from the Americans, Spanish, or
neighboring Indian tribes, they have transformed in terms of their own
personality. The women made over the plain Pueblo dress into a two-piece
garment fastened on both shoulders, which was then decorated with
hanging strands of silver, shell, and coral beads. The simple weave was
individualized with balanced lines of red, black, and blue. Similarly,
the Navaho women re-created the gown with a full skirt and tight bodice,
which was the fashion among Europeans and Americans of the middle
nineteenth century, and made it into a style that is now characteristic
of them.

PLATE VI. NAVAHO WOMAN'S NATIVE DRESS (Amsden, "Navaho Weavings").
The voluminous, flounced skirts of bright calico, which Reichard
(1928) describes; have a width of twelve to fifteen yards. To make the
skirt even wider, ruffles are gathered to the foundation with contrasting
stripes of material. The skirt is ankle length, and ripples and
flares gracefully as the woman walks or rides horseback. With it a
brightly colored, velvet blouse is worn. This blouse has a snugly
fitting bodice fastened with silver buttons or coins, and extends below
the waist, where it is slashed at both sides. Moccasins of dyed
buckskins and leggings decorated with silver and brass buttons are
frequently worn even today, although American shoes are taking their
place. The bright clothing makes a striking background for the necklaces
of silver and turquoise, and the strands of coral, shell, and glass
beads.
The costume of the men is equally colorful and picturesque: cotton
breeches, slit along the calf in the fashion of a Spanish
caballero; a long velvet or calico tunic, which resembles the
blouses of the women; quantities of necklaces, rings, conchas,
bracelets, and buttons; and a brightly colored headband as the
ensemble's distinguishing feature. Many men, however, now prefer
Americans jeans and broad-brimmed sombreros. In winter, both men and
women wear a gaudy Pendleton blanket about the shoulders, and, for
traveling, overshoes made from gunnysacks or animal pelts.
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