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  2. Buckskin (leather) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buckskin_(leather)

    Buckskin is the soft, pliable, porous preserved hide of an animal – usually deer – tanned in the same way as deerskin clothing worn by Native Americans. Some leather sold as "buckskin" may now be sheepskin tanned with modern chromate tanning chemicals and dyed to resemble real buckskin.

  3. Tanning (leather) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tanning_(leather)

    Tanning, or hide tanning, is the process of treating skins and hides of animals to produce leather. A tannery is the place where the skins are processed. Historically, vegetable based tanning used tannin , an acidic chemical compound derived from the bark of certain trees, in the production of leather.

  4. Plains hide painting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plains_hide_painting

    Buffalo hides, as well as deer, elk, and other animal hides, are painted. Clothing and robes are often brain-tanned to be soft and supple. Parfleches, shields, and moccasin soles are rawhide for toughness. In the past, Plains artists used a bone or wood stylus to paint with natural mineral and vegetable pigments.

  5. Plains Indians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plains_Indians

    Hides, with or without fur, provided material for much clothing. Most of the clothing consisted of the hides of buffalo and deer, as well as numerous species of birds and other small game. [32] Plains moccasins tended to be constructed with soft braintanned hide on the vamps and tough rawhide for the soles. Men's moccasins tended to have flaps ...

  6. Leather - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leather

    Leather is a strong, flexible and durable material obtained from the tanning, or chemical treatment, of animal skins and hides to prevent decay. The most common leathers come from cattle , sheep , goats, equine animals, buffalo, pigs and hogs, ostriches, and aquatic animals such as seals and alligators.

  7. #RockYourMocs: Why Native Americans — including Deb ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/rockyourmocs-why-native-americans...

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  8. Teri Greeves - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teri_Greeves

    She uses a loom for beaded bracelets. Her larger pictorial work involved beads stitched onto brain-tanned deer hide, which she often mounts onto wood or other structures. For her Best of Show piece in the 1999 Santa Fe Indian Market, she beaded a parade scene onto hide stretched over an antique umbrella frame.

  9. Deadly brain disease found in two California deer - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/deadly-brain-disease-found-two...

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