Sew Native by L.Cawley
Handmade Native wear
Ribbon shirts, Handbags, Baby Blankets, Shawls, traditional dresses
Custom reg SewNative is family oriented and operated.
Launched in 2016, SewNative has created custom Native American Ribbon Shirts for both Native and Non-Native people looking for a unique and meaningful piece of traditional native clothing and Regalia. Centrally located in Middletown, Connecticut SewNative has established a dedicated sewing studio inviting customers to come and work with us in creating your truly one of kind piece of handmade cloth
Come say hi! We are here at Mohegan Community Cemter from 11am-4pm.
Last event for 2023!
SewNative will be on hiatus and will not be taking anymore orders for the rest of the year.😥
Blessings for all! 🪶
49 Dzine Custom Native apparel for the culturally-minded, North American Indigenous person. Customized and operated by Natives.
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Happy National Quilting Day! 🧵 The squares of this môyák (quilt) date back to Emma Baker's late 1880s Mohegan Church Ladies Sewing Society. Members of the group considered new chiefs, decided on land claims and worked on crafts to be sold at the annual Green Corn Festival, now known as the Wigwam Festival.
Save the date!
Save the Date! 🪶🔥
Got a few shirts made in the last month. Working on another at the moment. With the weather getting colder, I’m hoping to get started and design more pieces.
October’s full Moon reaches its peak on Sunday, October 9, 2022 and is called the Hunter's Moon because it signaled the time to go hunting in preparation for the cold winter ahead. Other names for October's full moon include Drying Rice Moon, a Dakota name, describes part of the post-harvest process of preparing rice for winter.
Falling Leaves Moon is an Anishinaabe term that highlights the transition between summer and fall.
Freezing Moon (Ojibwe) and Ice Moon (Haida) refer to the increasingly cold temperatures of this period. Migrating Moon (Cree) refers to the time when birds begin to fly south to warmer climates. The Abenaki, Chippewa and Ojibwe call it the Leaf Falling Moon and the Algonquin call it the White Frost on the Grass Moon.