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When you purchase African Home Decor from our site, please share your Uses and Looks with us. Just drop a short introduction of your item and how you decided to use or display it.
With the African Mask Fans Market Baskets being both practical and beautiful, We are sure the uses are limitless.
Fans once reserved for Kings and Queens, now double as modern art. Handwoven into unique, intricate patterns, so much so that they may look similar but no 2 are exactly alike.
These handcrafted fair trade fans originate from West Africa, in Ghana. They are called Bolga Fans and are made in Bolgatanga, a historic, small town in the northern region of Ghana. The fans are purely hand woven and made from straw called “Elephant Grass”. They make the most beautiful wall decor pieces alone or in groupings. The essential accessory to keep you cool in more ways than one, and did we mention that they smell great!
Allow your pet to roll up all snugly in the spacious dog/animal basket, with handwoven with natural elephant grass natural straw.
The pet beds are intricately designed and woven by hand and will surely leave a lasting impression of African Home Decor
Ghana beads show the unique heritage a tribe or the country possess. For example, beads are both treasured and profoundly honored in Ghanaian culture. Beads play an important role in terms of rites and customs of the people. Primarily, Ghana beads are considered items of decoration. However, they could serve several purposes such as communication, expressing of ideas, messaging or sending signals and used as symbols to mean something.
It's not every day that you can arrive in your own cultural style, like in a traditional kente cloth, but it's also a formal bowtie. Or what about that unique gift you'd like to find for your newlywed friend, like a set of fertility statues, they are known to bring good luck and...
THE LEGEND
According to tribal legend, to ensure a couple's fertility, the statues should be placed on both sides of the doorway leading into the bedroom. If a woman or her spouse touches either statue as they enter the room, they will soon get pregnant.
A djembe or jembe (/ˈdʒɛmbeɪ/ JEM-bay; from Malinke jembe is a rope-tuned skin-covered goblet drum played with bare hands, originally from West Africa. According to the Bambara people in Mali, the name of the djembe comes from the saying "Anke djé, anke bé" which translates to "everyone gather together in peace" and defines the drum's purpose. In the Bambara language, "djé" is the verb for "gather" and "bé" translates as "peace."[3
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