High school students used a Lingít robe and to create an interactive 3D model for a water treatment plant.
Detail of a 150-year-old Lingít robe on Tuesday at the Alaska Native Heritage Center.
Most robes in this condition are laid flat and displayed under glass, but for Lingít weaver Shelly S’eiskaa Laws, that would mean its secrets would remain hidden. “If you’re a weaver, you always want to see the back of whatever you’re looking at, because what it looks like on the front doesn’t necessarily show you everything,” she said. “So for understanding the piece and for educational purposes, you really want to see the back, and that’s hard to do behind the glass.
Ben Jacuk wears Iñupiat mittens as student Daveon Parton makes a 3D scan of them on Tuesday. Some of the scans will be used in a sequel to the video game Never Alone, which is set in Iñupiat territory.
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