"cotton (textile)"@en . . "braided"@en . . "When this was acquired by the Museum it was thought to be from Guatemala.\r\nIn 1975 a note was added to the effect that it might have been imported into Guatemala. Perhaps a special loom had been imported from Europe, or a Spanish colonial weaver in Guatemala had been influenced by jaspe and tried to imitate it, or perhaps the shawls were imported from Europe? Certainly shawls like these were popular with both the Guatemalan Indians and the Spanish colonists. See T.87-1931 for general information on shawls and jaspe in Guatemala.\r\n\r\nAnn P Rowe, Curator of Western Hemisphere Textiles, The Textile Museum, Washington DC (personal communication 1997): 'The rebozos in the Maudslay Collection look much morel like Mexican rebozos than like any Guatemalan examples I have seen. The Eisen Collection, made in Guatemala in 1902, contains nothing similar. Mexican rebozos, both old and new, use more finely spun yarns and have narrower stripes than do Guatemalan ones. The presence of other Mexican textiles in the Maudslay Collection means that this attribution is not out of line.'" . . . "Woven cotton and silk with braided fringe"@en . "When this was acquired by the Museum it was thought to be from Guatemala.\r\nIn 1975 a note was added to the effect that it might have been imported into Guatemala. Perhaps a special loom had been imported from Europe, or a Spanish colonial weaver in Guatemala had been influenced by jaspe and tried to imitate it, or perhaps the shawls were imported from Europe? Certainly shawls like these were popular with both the Guatemalan Indians and the Spanish colonists. See T.87-1931 for general information on shawls and jaspe in Guatemala.\r\n\r\nAnn P Rowe, Curator of Western Hemisphere Textiles, The Textile Museum, Washington DC (personal communication 1997): 'The rebozos in the Maudslay Collection look much morel like Mexican rebozos than like any Guatemalan examples I have seen. The Eisen Collection, made in Guatemala in 1902, contains nothing similar. Mexican rebozos, both old and new, use more finely spun yarns and have narrower stripes than do Guatemalan ones. The presence of other Mexican textiles in the Maudslay Collection means that this attribution is not out of line.'" . .