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Colonists made baskets be weaving grasses or straw into round basket shapes. The materials had to be soaked first, usually overnight, so that it could be worked with. When the baskets dried, they held their shape and could be used.
branches, roots, and grasses
Steel wiredrawing plants manufacture steel baskets
People make wicker baskets by taking wicker (which are dried plant fronds,) and weaving them together in an interesting way. Directions on how to do this are available on major video websites.
Many different ways, by weaving pine needles, reeds, splicing river cane and weaving the slats, and even splicing branches of trees into slats and weaving them, soaking the material in water till plyable and weaving the material!
They make their nests by weaving fine grasses. The nest is in a cup shape.
Yes indeed they are. Plants provide manatees with the nourishment that they need. The plants make the manatee strong.
Oh, how I love questions relating to Canada! The Inuits made their baskets from dried plants they found in the Canadian tundra. Not many plants grow there, so they made them out whatever they could find.
Try this site: * Basket Weaving For Beginners - Beginners Basketry - Simple .…Basket Weaving For Beginners. This is where you can learn about the family activity or hobby of Basketry. Projects to help the younger members of your ...http://basketmakers.org/topics/beginners/beginnersmenu.htm
The chumash tribe made their baskets by weaving juncus rush or bulrush reeds together. they were weaved very tightly to hold water, food, valuables, money, preparing and storing food and they were also used for carryinng babies.
=have several main roots of the same size..=leaves make a big part of grass plants,,=most grasses have short stems covered by leaf bases..=grasses are efficient in photosynthesis
weavers usually take bamboo and other various grasses and use a sort or patters and weave the grass in and out of itself. weavers usually make baskets or carrying items.