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Vintage Mukluk Boots

Pair of Vintage Indigenous American Inuit Mukluks or Boots
Pair of Vintage Indigenous American Inuit Mukluks or Boots

Pair of Vintage Indigenous American Inuit Mukluks or Boots

Located in Hamilton, Ontario

This pair of vintage Inuit mukluks are presumed to have been made in Canada in circa 1950 in the

Category

Mid-20th Century North American Native American Vintage Mukluk Boots

Materials

Fur, Leather, Wool

People Also Browsed

Large Hand Carved Inuit Stylized Figurative Sculpture
Large Hand Carved Inuit Stylized Figurative Sculpture

Large Hand Carved Inuit Stylized Figurative Sculpture

Located in Hamilton, Ontario

This handcrafted sculpture was made in Northern Canada by an Inuit artisan in circa 1970. This sculpture is a series of two stylized human figures intermixed with two representations...

Category

Late 20th Century Canadian Native American Vintage Mukluk Boots

Materials

Antler

Impressive 1870s Arapaho/Sioux Beaded Hide Dress
Impressive 1870s Arapaho/Sioux Beaded Hide Dress

Impressive 1870s Arapaho/Sioux Beaded Hide Dress

By Arapaho Indian Art

Located in Coeur d'Alene, ID

Faceted Beads; Arapaho/Sioux dress on brain-tanned buffalo. Simple four color design; was probably the first dress made after quilling. Stars on dress, and unusual beaded bottom. Pe...

Category

1870s American Native American Vintage Mukluk Boots

Materials

Hide

Inuit Soapstone Figural Sculpture
Inuit Soapstone Figural Sculpture

Inuit Soapstone Figural Sculpture

$995Sale Price|20% Off

H 11.25 in W 6 in D 2 in

Inuit Soapstone Figural Sculpture

Located in Hamilton, Ontario

Eskimo figural soapstone carving.

Category

Mid-20th Century Canadian Vintage Mukluk Boots

Materials

Soapstone

Native American Sioux Beaded Teepee Bag
Native American Sioux Beaded Teepee Bag

Native American Sioux Beaded Teepee Bag

$5,750

H 19 in W 12 in D 5 in

Native American Sioux Beaded Teepee Bag

By Sioux Indian Art

Located in Coeur d'Alene, ID

Native American Sioux beaded teepee bag. Having beaded front, sides and top. Beadwork is mostly white with blue, yellow, red, and green forming traditional geometric design. Having t...

Category

Late 19th Century American Native American Vintage Mukluk Boots

Materials

Hide, Beads

19th Century Native American Nez Perce Beaded Belt
19th Century Native American Nez Perce Beaded Belt

19th Century Native American Nez Perce Beaded Belt

By Native American Art

Located in Coeur d'Alene, ID

Nez Perce beaded belt on harness leather adorned with brass diamonds in the center. Trunk piece - stored and in great condition. Beautiful colors of blues, reds, whites, orange and g...

Category

Early 19th Century American Native American Vintage Mukluk Boots

Materials

Beads

Sioux Beaded Pictorial Tunic
Sioux Beaded Pictorial Tunic

Sioux Beaded Pictorial Tunic

$34,500

H 36 in W 38 in D 38 in

Sioux Beaded Pictorial Tunic

By Sioux Indian Art

Located in Coeur d'Alene, ID

Sioux pictorial beaded tunic. Thread sewn and assembled using multiple hide panels. Beaded with 12 horses and 10 stars. Initials "C.S.C." Colors of deep red white hearts, various blu...

Category

19th Century American Native American Vintage Mukluk Boots

Materials

Hide, Beads

Large Lladro Yupik or Inuit Boy and Girl Affectionately Embracing Figurine
Large Lladro Yupik or Inuit Boy and Girl Affectionately Embracing Figurine

Large Lladro Yupik or Inuit Boy and Girl Affectionately Embracing Figurine

By Lladro

Located in Hamilton, Ontario

This very large hand painted porcelain figurine was made by the renowned Llladro company of Spain in circa 1985. The figurine depicts a young Inuit boy and girl affectionately embrac...

Category

Late 20th Century Spanish Native American Vintage Mukluk Boots

Materials

Porcelain

Cheyenne Native American Dress
Cheyenne Native American Dress

Cheyenne Native American Dress

$9,000

H 50 in W 50 in D 50 in

Cheyenne Native American Dress

Located in Coeur d'Alene, ID

Pre-reservation Cheyenne dress. Hand-sewn, pieced together; blue trade cloth, ribbon-like edging, cowry shell cape on both sides. This piece without any restoration. Hard to find thi...

Category

1870s American Native American Vintage Mukluk Boots

Materials

Shell

19th Century, Sioux Beaded High-Top Moccasins
19th Century, Sioux Beaded High-Top Moccasins

19th Century, Sioux Beaded High-Top Moccasins

$10,450

H 21.75 in W 3.75 in D 9.5 in

19th Century, Sioux Beaded High-Top Moccasins

By Sioux Indian Art

Located in Coeur d'Alene, ID

This is an outstanding set of authentic original beaded hide high-top / high-top moccasins with hard parfleche soles from the Sioux Native American Indians dating to circa 1880. The ...

Category

Late 19th Century American Native American Vintage Mukluk Boots

Materials

Hide, Beads

19th Century, Southern Plains Beaded High-Top Moccasins
19th Century, Southern Plains Beaded High-Top Moccasins

19th Century, Southern Plains Beaded High-Top Moccasins

Located in Coeur d'Alene, ID

Southern plains Hightop Moccasins Item Number: AG2312 Exceptional Kiowa/Comanche hightop moccasins dyed with yellow ochre. Adorned with a single beaded band above the sole, the l...

Category

Late 19th Century American Native American Vintage Mukluk Boots

Materials

Hide, Beads

19th Century Native American Hidatsa Arikara Medicine Shirt
19th Century Native American Hidatsa Arikara Medicine Shirt

19th Century Native American Hidatsa Arikara Medicine Shirt

Located in Coeur d'Alene, ID

Hidatsa Arikara medicine shirt worn by a warrior who deserved honors, pre-reservation. Horseshoes represent successful horse raids, and the six quilled eagle feathers signify war cou...

Category

19th Century American Native American Vintage Mukluk Boots

Materials

Hide

Beautiful 19th Century Apache Figurative Olla Shaped Basket
Beautiful 19th Century Apache Figurative Olla Shaped Basket

Beautiful 19th Century Apache Figurative Olla Shaped Basket

By Apache Indian Art

Located in Coeur d'Alene, ID

Apache figural basketry olla with seven dogs on shoulder. After an olla was filled to the brim with wild grass seeds such as chia or amaranth, or domestic plant products like corn or...

Category

Mid-19th Century American Native American Vintage Mukluk Boots

Materials

Other

Split Horn Headdress
Split Horn Headdress

Split Horn Headdress

$40,250

H 27 in W 14 in D 9 in

Split Horn Headdress

Located in Coeur d'Alene, ID

Heavily adorned split horn headdress with ermine drops, silk ribbons, hawk bells, stroud covered horns, brass trade beads and brass buttons on red stroud brain tanned buffalo cap. St...

Category

19th Century American Native American Vintage Mukluk Boots

Materials

Fur

Plateau Beaded Dress
Plateau Beaded Dress

Plateau Beaded Dress

$17,250

H 48 in W 45 in D 45 in

Plateau Beaded Dress

Located in Coeur d'Alene, ID

Beautiful tanned elk hide dress. The yoke with underlying rows of larger red, white, green and blue beads. Shoulder strips lazy stitched with 20/0 cut seed beads and containing arrow...

Category

20th Century American Native American Vintage Mukluk Boots

Materials

Hide

19th Century Native American Great Lakes Gun Stock Club
19th Century Native American Great Lakes Gun Stock Club

19th Century Native American Great Lakes Gun Stock Club

By Native American Art

Located in Coeur d'Alene, ID

Well tacked Great Lakes gun stock club with tapering hexagonal point. Recessed hand grip and shaft, profusely decorated with a pattern of pewter head iron nails forming zig zag, circ...

Category

Mid-19th Century American Native American Vintage Mukluk Boots

Materials

Metal

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A Close Look at Native-american Furniture

Native American broadly describes any Indigenous people in North America and encompasses hundreds of tribes and groups, all with distinct cultures. Native American–style furniture and decor likewise varies widely, from pieces created by Indigenous people to those appropriated by non-native designers.

Indigenous furniture’s rich heritage includes the bentwood boxes of the Northwest Coast carved from cedar for storing household or ceremonial objects. Generations of Native American people have made baskets for holding household items, with those in the Northeast using sweetgrass and those in the Southeast using pine needles and wicker. Artisans in the Plateau region wove watertight pieces like cradles from plant materials. Although these objects were intricately made, they were usually utilitarian rather than decorative.

The colonization of North America and the removal of Indigenous people from their lands led to the suppression of these practices. Many styles that used Native American motifs — such as Southwestern style, which was heavily influenced by the geometric patterns of Navajo textiles — have historically not involved Indigenous creators and, instead, have taken their traditions without their tribal context.

When decorating a home with Native American–style furniture, it is important to do so respectfully, by understanding the origins of motifs and objects and examining who profits from their sale. There are now Indigenous-led companies, such as Cherokee designer Cray Bauxmont-Flynn’s Amatoya and Totem House Design, promoting Indigenous work in furniture and home decor. Supporting Indigenous artists and artisans is essential to confronting the still pervasive issue of cultural appropriation in design.

Find a collection of Native American living room furniture, folk art, rugs and carpets, decorative objects and other items on 1stDibs.

Finding the Right Native-american-objects for You

As part of thoughtful home decor, antique and vintage Native American objects — works created by Native American artists and artisans — can bring rich textures and colors into a space.

Art collecting can be done in a socially and environmentally conscious way that reinvests in local communities. Tribal art is traditionally crafted with earth-friendly materials that respect the environment.

Textiles have long been objects of art and utility for Native Americans. Traditional weaving techniques involve material made from plant and animal fibers. Different tribes have woven distinctive patterns and colors into blankets, rugs and garments, such as the vibrant geometric shapes woven from wool by the Navajo.

After metal and glass beads were introduced to North America by Europeans, they became a popular form of art. Intricate beading appears on clothing, jewelry and other objects. Beadwork not only looks stunning, but it is also deeply emblematic of Native American ethnicity and can be used to pass stories handed down from generation to generation. Beaded garments have often been commissioned for important events like weddings, dances and celebrations.

Native Americans initially created pottery out of necessity to carry water and store food. For centuries, artists have decorated jugs, vases and other vessels, from designs etched into clay to experimentation with firing methods for unique finishes.

Find a diverse collection of colorful and culturally enriching antique and vintage Native American decorative items, objects and much more on 1stDibs.