Lot Essay
Several factors lead to the identification of this shirt as Central Plains. First there are the construction techniques employed. The shirt is beaded in lazy stitch but with the individual rows of beads lining up horizontally, similar to what is common in Southwestern Cheyenne beadwork. Secondly the attaching of the quilled hairlocks is done in a non-Sioux technique. Thirdly, the shirt cut is more typical of the Southern-Central Plains area, with the use of yellow paint on the body and green paint on the fringes. The neck flaps are also sewn down on the shirt body, which is an unusual trait. The techniques are similar to a shirt collected by Francis La Flesche, in the early 1900's, among the Omaha and currently in the Berlin Museum (Taylor, 1998).