top of page

Dinapat (b)

LOCAL NAME:

Dinapat (b)

ENGLISH NAME:

Blanket with mortar-like motifs

DESCRIPTION:

Ilocos & Ilocano: Dinapat
A three-paneled brocade-woven blanket with red and green rows of patterns and white fringed borders.

COMMONLY USED BY/IN:

Ilocos, Ilocano

MATERIAL COMPOSITION:

Thread, Dye

ITEM CONSTRUCTION:

Brocade weave, Stitching

DIMENSIONS:

Length
160 cm

Width
110 cm

Fringed borders
4cm

ACQUISITION YEAR:

2021

DISPLAY STATUS:

BURC

RESEARCH DATA:

The dinapat design on Abra and Ilocos textiles is produced using the brocade weaving method, specifically the continuous supplementary weft technique employed when weaving pinilian textiles. According to Pastor-Roces (1991), pinilian or brocade weaving produces designs with embroidery-like motifs and patterns that float in relief on the cloth’s surface, a characteristic shared with the dinapat. Dinapat textiles are pinilian textiles with the key difference being seen in the structure of the design, wherein the pinilian textiles always have spaces between motifs, while the dinapat have full designs where motifs and patterns are seamless. Furthermore, dinapat has motifs and patterns “on the entire surface” (Pastor-Roces 1991, p. 63), or in other words, that which “occupies the whole blanket” (Salvador-Amores 2019, p. 27).

This dinapat from the collection features traditional motifs, with red X-shaped patterns identified as a series of mortar-like designs. On the fringes are plain strips of yarn, known as pulikos hand-sewn around the edges.

REFERENCES:

Pastor-Roces, M. (1991). Sinaunang Habi: Philippine Ancestral Weave. Nikki Books.

Salvador-Amores, A. (2019). Anthropological Analysis of Itneg Textiles. In Anthropological analysis, mathematical symmetry and technical characterization of Cordillera Textiles. Corditex Research Report, UP Baguio 2016-2019.

bottom of page