During the early decades of the 20th century, Miccosukee Seminole women in Florida developed a unique style of patchwork clothing. They used hand-operated sewing machines to piece together brightly colored cotton shirts and dresses, and they outfitted dolls made for the tourist trade in miniature versions of these traditional garments. This male doll, made circa 1935, wears a man's foksikco.bi, or big shirt.
National Museum of the American Indian
Washington, D.C.
Scott Catalogue USA: 3873e
unused
Copyright United States Postal Service. All rights reserved.
Museum ID: 2005.2003.111.5
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