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<p>[QUOTE="Taupou, post: 4376843, member: 45"]A chief's blanket, or wearing blanket/robe, is identified by the way it is woven, rather than strictly by the size. They are woven "wider than long," with the warp running top to bottom. Both are designed to be worn/hung the same way they were made on the loom. So rugs would thus be considered woven "longer than wide."</p><p><br /></p><p>A saddle blanket comes in two shapes and sizes,</p><p>depending on the size of the horse it's to be used on: a "single," which is square, roughly 30-33" on a side; or a "double," a rectangular shape used folded in half, which is in the 30-33" by 60-66" range. I'm personally of the opinion that anything called a "saddle blanket" could be used (whether it is/was, or not) so should conform to those sizes. Something 17" x 26", or anything else outside those basic dimensions, would be considered a mat or rug.</p><p><br /></p><p>A "child's blanket" is pretty much an over-used and meaningless term, unless it can be considered a smaller-sized wearing blanket, which again, would be related to how it was woven. (Wearing a rug doesn't make it a "robe," any more than wearing a basket on your head makes it a "hat," despite the number of claims on eBay.) </p><p><br /></p><p>True lighter-weight "blankets" haven't been woven by the Navajo since the late 1890s, as mentioned, when competition from factories such as Pendleton, J.Capps, Buell, and others, (plus the loss of sheep during the Navajo's imprisonment at Bosque Redondo), led to them changing to weaving rugs, instead. A "chief's" or "wearing" blanket/robe is identified not by size, but by the way it was woven. Like rugs, it is designed to be hung or worn in the same direction it was originally on the loom, with the warps running top to bottom. In the case of wearing blankets, it means they are woven "wider than long," which is opposite of rugs, which are woven "longer than wide." </p><p><br /></p><p>A saddle blanket comes in basically two shapes and sizes, depending a bit on the size of the horse it is to be used on. A "single," is square, roughly 28-32" on a side; a "double," is a rectangular shape, used folded in half, which is in the 28-32" by 59-66" range.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="Taupou, post: 4376843, member: 45"]A chief's blanket, or wearing blanket/robe, is identified by the way it is woven, rather than strictly by the size. They are woven "wider than long," with the warp running top to bottom. Both are designed to be worn/hung the same way they were made on the loom. So rugs would thus be considered woven "longer than wide." A saddle blanket comes in two shapes and sizes, depending on the size of the horse it's to be used on: a "single," which is square, roughly 30-33" on a side; or a "double," a rectangular shape used folded in half, which is in the 30-33" by 60-66" range. I'm personally of the opinion that anything called a "saddle blanket" could be used (whether it is/was, or not) so should conform to those sizes. Something 17" x 26", or anything else outside those basic dimensions, would be considered a mat or rug. A "child's blanket" is pretty much an over-used and meaningless term, unless it can be considered a smaller-sized wearing blanket, which again, would be related to how it was woven. (Wearing a rug doesn't make it a "robe," any more than wearing a basket on your head makes it a "hat," despite the number of claims on eBay.) True lighter-weight "blankets" haven't been woven by the Navajo since the late 1890s, as mentioned, when competition from factories such as Pendleton, J.Capps, Buell, and others, (plus the loss of sheep during the Navajo's imprisonment at Bosque Redondo), led to them changing to weaving rugs, instead. A "chief's" or "wearing" blanket/robe is identified not by size, but by the way it was woven. Like rugs, it is designed to be hung or worn in the same direction it was originally on the loom, with the warps running top to bottom. In the case of wearing blankets, it means they are woven "wider than long," which is opposite of rugs, which are woven "longer than wide." A saddle blanket comes in basically two shapes and sizes, depending a bit on the size of the horse it is to be used on. A "single," is square, roughly 28-32" on a side; a "double," is a rectangular shape, used folded in half, which is in the 28-32" by 59-66" range.[/QUOTE]
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