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  • Lot n° 38 A Mexican Late Maximilian Period Bandera sarape Circa 1875-1880 A Mexican flag Bandera-style sarape finely woven in red, white, and green wool with a multicolored central diamond medallion and striped banded motifs to each end, and with elaborate knotted fringing 81" H x 37" W approximately Other notes: Following the fall of the Second Mexican Empire, Mexican weaving entered a new phase as changing economic conditions and renewed national identity shaped textile production. By the mid-1870s, imported European yarns had largely reverted back to domestically spun wool and cotton, and weavers developed the Bandera (flag) sarape, distinguished by bold horizontal bands of red, white, and green. While retaining the technical sophistication of Maximilian-period weaving, these textiles embraced a distinctly Mexican aesthetic and became one of the defining sarape styles of the late nineteenth century. Overall good condition with dust accumulation, light creasing, and typical signs of wear commensurate with age and use. Slight patchy fading on each side to the green wool section. A few scattered spots and faint stains. Scattered very small holes and areas of wear to weave, many with sympathetic stitched darned repairs. Red wool section with slight dye transfer to edge. Knotted fringe with areas of breaks and with scattered losses. With a stitched fabric pole sleeve to one short end.

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