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Oaxaca Mexico Mexican Mayan Tribal Art Boho Travel Binder

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5.08 cm Paper Capacity
-CA$4.00
-CA$4.00

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Size: Avery Signature 5.1 cm Binder

You’ve spent time crafting interesting reports, so why not create an eye-catching Avery custom binder to match? Showcase your business with custom client binders, proposals and reports, or design unique wedding albums, recipe books and photo albums.

  • Dimensions: 25.4 cm w x 29.84 cm l; Spine: 7.11 cm
  • 3-ring binder designed for letter (21.59 cm x 27.94 cm) sized paper
  • 5.08 cm capacity, fits 540 pages with 1 Touch™ EZD™ Rings
  • Full bleed photo-quality printing
  • Binder inserts not included
WARNING: This product contains functional sharp points and pinch point hazards. Not for children under 8 years of age. Use with adult supervision.

Ring Type: One Touch EZD™ Ring

2.5 cm Capacity: 275 pages
3.8 cm Capacity: 400 pages
5.1 cm Capacity: 540 pages
Locking rings open with ease and keep pages secure.

About This Design

Oaxaca Mexico Mexican Mayan Tribal Art Boho Travel Binder

Oaxaca Mexico Mexican Mayan Tribal Art Boho Travel Binder

Contact designer for assistance with personalization or special orders. The state of Oaxaca in southern Mexico has a noteworthy tradition of finely crafted textiles, particularly handmade embroidery and woven goods that frequently utilize a backstrap loom. Oaxaca is home to several different groups of indigenous peoples, each of which has a distinctive textile tradition. Oaxacan fibres may be hand spun from cotton or locally cultivated silk. Traditional dye sources include purpura pansa among the Huave, Chontal, and Mixtec people. The Chontal and Mazatec also utilize cochineal to attain bright red tones. According to Alejandro de Ávila B., founding director of the Ethnobotanical Garden in Oaxaca, the region's biological diversity yields Mexico's greatest variety of fibres and dyes, and "the technical sophistication of Oaxaca's textiles is unparalelled in the country." Traditional clothing items among the peoples of Oaxaca include the huipil, a women's blouse constructed from several panels; the ceñidor, a type of sash among the Mazatec; and the paño, a Chinantec head covering. Handcrafted Oaxacan textiles employ plainweave, brocade patterns, gauze weave. Mexican textile expert Irmbard Weitlaner Johnson associates pre-Christian spiritual traditions with the presence of butterflies in Mazatec textile motifs. "To this day the Mazatecs identify the butterfly as the soul that leaves the body. They believe that the souls of the deceased have permission to come to this world once a year on All Saints' Day and the Day of the Dead to visit their family. This is the period when butterflies are most abundant in the area and the Mazatecs consider it a sin to kill them." Regional motifs without specific spiritual meaning, or for which disputed interpretations exist, include a class of stepped fret known as xicalcoliuhqui, which means "twisted ornament for decorating gourds" in the Nahuatl language; and the double spiral ilhuitl, whose name translates as "fiesta day." Pre-Colonial tradition associates colour with the four cardinal directions: yellow with east, red with north, blue and green with west, and white with south. Another shared motif among the region's indigenous peoples is a rectangular ornament below the neckline of the huipil. No specific symbolism is known, but it is a frequent theme in pre-colonial codices and surviving historic textiles that remains in popular use. Traditionally, Oaxacan women wrap a red faja (a woven sash) around their waists as a protection from evil. [courtesy Wikipedia] Huichol Oaxacan Mexico Mexican Aztec Mayan Tribal Bohemian Boho Ethnic Oaxaca Colourful "Folk Art" Cheerful Colourful Hispanic Precolumbian Zapotec Mixtec Huave Chontal Mazatec Olmec Toltec Maya Goddess Quetzalcoatl "Feathered Serpent" Indigenous Native American Latin America Southwestern Western Textile Textiles Embroidery Embroidered Weaving Handwoven Beadwork Craft Crafts Village Naif Latino Latina Huipil Faja Pre-Colonial Ceñidor Paño New Mexico Santa Fe Taos Peasant Style Design Pattern Print Trend Trending Trendy Travel Traveller Well-Travelled Global Colourful Cheerful Sunny Sun Sol "Brillo del Sol" Bright Happy Primary Colours Colour Green Gold Yellow Red Blue Fuschia Hot Pink Lime Black

Customer Reviews

4.7 out of 5 stars rating6.6K Total Reviews
5575 total 5-star reviews617 total 4-star reviews154 total 3-star reviews97 total 2-star reviews111 total 1-star reviews
6,554 Reviews
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A gift for my best friend from childhood. The personalization was an excellent feature. The colors looked exactly as I expected. Printing was perfect.
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Other Info

Product ID: 127583531720564225
Designed on 2016-01-09, 1:08 PM
Rating: G