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Center For Traditional Textiles of Cusco - Peru
The idea of keeping the textile heritage of the Cusco region alive was born in Chinchero during the mid-1970s. Some weavers including Nilda’s own relatives were deeply concerned that young people were turning away from weaving and that complex designs were being forgotten. The small group began to work together, determined to revive their traditional textiles, skills and designs. Using handspun yarn and natural fibers (alpaca, llama, sheep) was the first step toward restoring high-quality indigenous textiles. Led by Nilda Callanaupa Alvarez and supporters from the USA, the informal cultural project ultimately developed into a non-profit organization with headquarters in Cusco. Envisioned as an educational and research center, the CTTC’s primary mission is to preserve and promote high-quality traditional Cusqueñan textiles, while providing support to the weavers through the sale of their products. Through research, demonstrations and workshops for its members and visitors, the Center is proactively preserving hand-spinning and reviving intricate weaving techniques.
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Chahuaytire village, located above the town of Pisac. The Chahuaytire weaving community is supported by the Centro de Textiles Tradicionales Del Cusco, Peru (CTTC) founded in 1996 by indigenous weavers of the Cusco region and international supporters, to save, promote and spread the Peruvian traditional textile knowledge.
The weavers meet once a week, every Wednesday, in the weaving center set up in the open air. The Chahuaytire community uses backstrap looms and four-stakes looms, weaving double-faced fabric (the pattern is the same on both sides but the colors opposite and fabrics with supplementary warp technique. Handspun & handwoven textiles, all naturally dyed.
peru1601PeruAndesAlpacaWoolLlamaHandwovenHandspunTextilesTraditionalBackstrap loom