Basket: white oak, planter
Dublin Core
Title
Basket: white oak, planter
Subject
Basket making
Cherokee baskets
Handicraft
Description
This undated photograph was made by the Indian Arts and Crafts Board and shows a white oak planter basket that was made by Carol Welch. This basket utilizes techniques and patterns usually associated with rivercane, and the pattern is called the Chief’s Daughter. Carol Smith Welch was the daughter of Helen Bradley Smith, an accomplished Cherokee basket weaver. Her aunt, Eva Bradley, was also a basket weaver. Born in 1940, Welch learned to weave white oak baskets by watching her mother and later learned to weave rivercane and honeysuckle baskets from Lottie Stamper in school basketry classes. While at school, she also learned the double weave method of making rivercane baskets and, later, became Lottie Stamper’s assistant. Her husband, Davis Welch, is a master mask maker. Welch lives in the Big Cove Community of the Qualla Indian Boundary, North Carolina.
Creator
United States. Indian Arts and Crafts Board
Welch, Carol
Source
Photograph Collection
Publisher
Hunter Library Digital Collections, Western Carolina University, Cullowhee, NC 28723
Date
unknown
Rights
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/
Format
jpg
photographs
Type
StillImage
Identifier
16227
https://southernappalachiandigitalcollections.org/object/16227
Date Created
2009-04-16
Rights Holder
All rights reserved. For permissions and use, contact Qualla Arts and Crafts Mutual, Inc., Cherokee, NC 28719;
Spatial Coverage
Qualla Boundary
Appalachian Region, Southern
Extent
8" x 9"(dimension)
Is Part Of
Craft Revival
Collection
Citation
United States. Indian Arts and Crafts Board and Welch, Carol, “Basket: white oak, planter,” OAI, accessed May 8, 2025, https://sadc.qi-cms.com/omeka/items/show/16227.