OXCHUC JORONGO

Two images featuring women wearing bohemian-style shawls with striped patterns in black, white, orange, and beige. The shawls have fringe details along the edges.

Our Most Favorite & Popular Piece

This is a one-of-a-kind handwoven Jorongo from the highland Tzotzil Mayan community of Oxchuc, Chiapas, Mexico. A jorongo is a traditional open-sleeve poncho-style blouse — one of the most iconic garments of the Tzotzil Mayan weaving tradition.

The Diamond Motif represents the Universe, and can be worn one of two ways as seen in the picture. When a woman puts on A huipil, she SYMBOLICALLY emerges as the axis of the world. The designs of the universe radiate around her head, extending over the open sleeves and the body of the huipil to form an open cross with the woman in the middle.

Woven on a traditional backstrap loom using techniques passed down for hundreds of generations, this piece is a living work of indigenous art and cultural identity.

Here the Natural & Supernatural meet. Here, in the very center of a world woven from dreams and myths, she stands between heaven & the Underworld.  As our ancestors have done for Millenia.

✦ Handwoven on a traditional backstrap loom ✦ Open-sleeve poncho style ✦ Made by indigenous women artisans in Oxchuc, Chiapas ✦ One of a kind — no two are the same ✦ Fair Trade & Indigenous Made ✦ Hand wash cold, hang dry

OXCHUC JORONGO

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