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Large Old Bamboo Woven Baskets

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  • Chinese Woven Bamboo Basket
    Located in Chicago, IL
    This smoky brown carrying basket originates from southeast Asia and is expertly crafted of thin strips of smoked bamboo. Carefully hand-woven in a plain weave with a band of exposed ...
    Category

    Early 20th Century Chinese Rustic Decorative Baskets

    Materials

    Wood, Bamboo

  • Old Basket Woven from Japanese Bamboo / Farm Tools / Folk Art / Flower Basket
    Located in Sammu-shi, Chiba
    It is a bamboo basket made around the Taisho era to the early Showa era (1912-1950) in Japan. This is a tool used by Japanese farmers and was carried ...
    Category

    Mid-20th Century Japanese Taisho Decorative Baskets

    Materials

    Bamboo

  • Large Woven Basket
    Located in London, GB
    A rare large early basket with bands of triangle decoration. Probably Hambukushu people Botswana, Africa. 1940s. Measures: 27cm H x 48cm W.
    Category

    Vintage 1940s Botswanan Decorative Baskets

    Materials

    Natural Fiber

    Large Woven Basket
    $1,730 Sale Price
    20% Off
  • 1900s Russian Silver Basket
    Located in Jesmond, Newcastle Upon Tyne
    A fine antique Russian silver basket; an addition to our diverse ornamental silverware collection. This fine antique Russian silver basket has a circular rounded form onto a circula...
    Category

    Early 20th Century Russian Other Decorative Baskets

    Materials

    Silver

  • Japanese Woven Bamboo Ikebana Basket
    Located in Atlanta, GA
    A Japanese woven bamboo basket with handle from early 20th century, circa end of Meiji to Taisho period. The basket was constructed in the form o...
    Category

    Early 20th Century Japanese Japonisme Sculptures and Carvings

    Materials

    Bamboo

  • Large Japanese Woven Bamboo Morikago Basket by Maeda Chikubosai I
    By Maeda Chikubosai
    Located in Atlanta, GA
    A large and impressive Japanese basket in the form of a morikago by Maeda Chikubosai I (1872-1950) circa first half of the 20th century. Chikubosai I was from the Kansai Region and active in Sakai, Osaka prefecture. He was instructed by Wada Waichisai I, (1851-1901). Morikago is a shallow open basket with handle. It was traditionally used to display fruits, sometimes flowers, during Sencha tea ceremony. In contrast to Chanoyu, Sencha ceremony uses loose green tea leaves instead of tea powder. The placement of loose fruits in the basket meant that the pattern of the bottom, which is often elaborate, was meant to be visible. This morikago was beautifully constructed with bent bamboo frame and twill plaits for the body. The bottom of the basket features a double diamond pattern achieved with a variation of plover plait. The bifurcated handles was bundle-plated with a rather free spirit approach. They show a poetic suggestion of movement, as if the bamboos were still swaying in the wind. The basket has a copper insert that fits perfectly and it is quite possibly the original. The basket is signed on the base "Chikubosai". The style of the signature shows that it was made by Maeda Chikubosai I. For another Morikago basket by Maeda Chikubosai I, see page 79 of "Masters of Bamboo" by Rinne. For the study of the signature of Chikubosai I "Baskets Master Pieces of Japanese Bamboo Art...
    Category

    Early 20th Century Japanese Japonisme Decorative Baskets

    Materials

    Copper

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