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Piningitan (a)

LOCAL NAME:

Piningitan (a)

ENGLISH NAME:

Wrap-around skirt

DESCRIPTION:

Abra, Tinguian, and Itneg: Piningitan
A plain-woven white wrap-around skirt with three panels, featuring black embroidery motifs such as frogs, human figures, and rice plants. The skirt is finished with a red band border at each of its weft ends and two brocade-woven warp edges adorned with tiny X and diamond patterns in indigo and red

COMMONLY USED BY/IN:

Abra, Tinguian, Itneg

MATERIAL COMPOSITION:

Cotton threads, Natural dye

ITEM CONSTRUCTION:

Plain weave, Brocade weave, Dyeing, Embroidery

DIMENSIONS:

Length
108 cm

Width
82 cm

ACQUISITION YEAR:

2021

RESEARCH DATA:

The piningitan is a wrap-around skirt worn by Tinguian or Itneg women, typically from adolescence to adulthood, in Abra. Its name comes from the root word pingit, which means “on the edge,” referencing the decorative trims along the skirt’s edges (Respicio, 2000). It consists of plain white woven panels, each bordered with red-dyed threads. The longer sides (weft edges) follow the same weaving style as the white panels, while the shorter sides (warp edges) feature a brocade technique to create more intricate patterns.
In contrast to the everyday skirts worn by Tinguian women, the piningitan is reserved for special occasions when the community or neighboring villages gather. Respicio (2000) mentions several such events, including the bedeng (a peace settlement between villages), pakalon or boda (wedding celebrations), lay-og (feasts for the dead), and other traditional ceremonies for the ancestors. During these events, women wear the piningitan and participate in the tadek, a traditional dance (Respicio, 2000).
The piningitan’s design highlights the intricate craftsmanship of the weavers, as well as the Tinguian people’s view of their environment and the weaving process. A key pattern, the binek-beklat, which resembles a python, is woven along the two warp edges using black/indigo, red, and yellow threads in the pinilian technique (Respicio, 2000). This design is also referred to as tinultulbek or "key," marking the start and end points of the weaving process (Respicio, 2000). Another design, the inar-arabas, is a caterpillar-like pattern made with indigo and red yarns, arranged in a staccato fashion between the skirt's white panels (Respicio, 2000). Finally, the weft edges, known as inurlma, are dyed using natural pigments such as sapang (for red), tayum (for indigo), and wild ginger (for yellow) (Respicio, 2000).
This particular piningitan from the collection is embellished with traditional embroidery motifs in black threads. Motifs resembling frogs, human figures, and rice plants are embroidered as outlines for the panel joineries, the brocade-woven details of the warp edges, and the red-banded weft ends.

REFERENCES:

Respicio, N. (2000). The Dynamics of Textiles Across Cultures in Northern Luzon, Philippines. Unpublished PhD Dissertation. University of the Philippines Diliman.

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