made by Lucy Telles (
National Museum of the American Indian) Telles, who learned
basket weaving as a child, was well known for her fine basketry during her lifetime. Her innovations in basket weaving had a lasting influence on Yosemite weavers. While traditional Miwok baskets had one color, she used two colors per basket. She created black from
bracken fern root (
Pteridium aquilinum) and red from split
redbud twigs. She created new basketry designs, some inspired by
Plains Indian geometric beadwork. Lucy sold her baskets to Yosemite visitors. By the 1920s, Telles was regarded as the best basket weaver in Yosemite Valley. In 1924, she won a prize of $100 for her baskets. Her most famous basket was the largest known to have been woven in Yosemite Valley. It sold for $250 in 1939. An enormous basket with a 36" diameter that took her four years to weave took first prize at the
1933 World's Fair. In 1950, Telles raffled off this basket, her son won it, and the
National Park Service purchased it for their
Yosemite Museum. Lucy demonstrated basket making to park visitors from 1930 until her death in 1955 or 1956. She taught her grandson's wife,
Julia Peter Parker (
Kashaya Pomo) how to weave baskets. She was one of the most prolific
California and Yosemite – Mono Lake Paiute basket makers. Several of her baskets are featured at the
Yosemite National Park Indian museum. == Legacy ==