Navajo rugs patterns. Mobile rugged printers. Constantine carpet tile.
Navajo Rugs Patterns
(Navajo rug) Navajo rugs and blankets (diyogí) are textiles produced by Navajo people (Diné) of the Four Corners area of the United States. Navajo textiles are highly regarded and have been sought after as trade items for over 150 years.
Flat weave rugs in geometric patterns woven by Navajo Indians in the American Southwest.
A regular and intelligible form or sequence discernible in certain actions or situations
An arrangement or sequence regularly found in comparable objects or events
A repeated decorative design
(pattern) form: a perceptual structure; "the composition presents problems for students of musical form"; "a visual pattern must include not only objects but the spaces between them"
(pattern) model: plan or create according to a model or models
form a pattern; "These sentences pattern like the ones we studied before"
47338 Navaho Blanket coat w Spider Woman Crosses
Some things need to stay in the family!
Spider Woman (who lives, the Navajo say, on Spider Rock in Canyon de Chelly) is always available to help her descendants. She can best be heard in the wind (or on the transparent threads of synchronicities) - if one is quiet, and prepared to listen. Navajo rugs often have Spiderwoman's Cross woven into the pattern. The cross of Spider Woman, is another very important symbol for our time, because it represents balance - the union of the 4 directions or 4 elements. The fifth element is the unifying force, the mystery at the center. To “walk in beauty” is to be aware of a “moving point of balance” as we walk across the land, and walk through the circles of our lives and relationships.
Ghost Rugs
First thought? I see Navajo rugs reflecting from the nearby skyscraper glass panels onto the old Harkin Cinema building. This was taken at sunset in downtown Tempe, Arizona.