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Kente Cloth Cotton
Handmade Clutch
50% cotton, 50% rayon. Polyester lining
Made in Ghana
According to multiple sources, Kente is an Akan royal and sacred cloth worn only in times of extreme importance and is the cloth of kings and nobility, before finding its way into bags, and scarves sold around the globe nowadays. In Akan culture, the different colors and intricate patterns used in the weaving do have traditional meanings.
White: is the color of purity, innocence, spirituality, and peace (mental, collective, and interior). Very small amount are found on the kente (sometimes just the threads are white). White has a divine and sacred character;
Yellow: is the color of gold, and symbolizes preciousness, royalty, wealth (financial, spiritual, intellectual, etc), and fertility. It is associated with the earth’s generosity. This color is strongly represented in the kente, because the king, who wears it during public gatherings, embodies all these virtues: gold, royalty, wealth, high status, glory, spiritual purity. Yellow, just like the sun’s rays, also reminds of divine goodness.
Black: is the color of bereavement, and darkness, but also of mystery and secrecy. It is mostly used in initiation and purification ceremonies. It is an ambivalent color representing both obscurantism, and spiritual elevation; it is thus both feared and revered. Its discrete presence in kente reminds that noblemen are first and foremost the guardians of the throne. Black also represents maturation and intensified spiritual energy;
Blue: reminds of the big spaces: the sea and the sky. It symbolizes elevation, communion, humility, patience, and wisdom. The king and noblemen have perfect control over their environment. Blue is the color of peace, harmony, and love. It is sometimes associated with yellow or white, or red, to represent wealth and power which are founded on spirituality, and which bring tranquility, and balance, and constitutes a strong guarantee of stability for all powers;
Green: is the symbol of life, growth and harmony. Green reminds of the forest, the trees, birth, and youth. It is also linked to vegetation, planting, harvesting, growth, and spiritual renewal. Joined with blue and yellow on a kente, it completes the meaning of the clothing which expresses wealth and nobility founded on humility, humanism, and balance.
Grey: healing and cleansing rituals, and is associated with ashes;
Brown: is the color of mother earth, and is associated with healing;
Pink: mostly worn by women, is associated with the female essence of life: sweetness, tenderness, calmness, pleasantness;
Purple: is associated with feminine aspects of life, and is mostly worn by women;
Red: political and spiritual moods, bloodshed, sacrificial rites, and death;
Silver: serenity, purity, joy, and is associated with the moon;
As the colors have meaning, the shapes on kente cloth also have meanings. There are five (5) most commonly used patterns: square, triangle, diamond, circle, and cross.
Square: is the symbol of the earth and cosmos, with its four sides marking the junction between these two entities. It is associated with femininity, because the woman gives life (creation – procreation). This shape is very common in the kente as a reminder that the Akan society is matrilineal.
Triangle: with its three sides, represents life and family. The base symbolizes the birth (of the world) and existence (realization of self, and one’s destiny). The summit marks both death (physical) and spiritual elevation. The three sides represent the union of masculine and feminine principles that combine to give a third principle, like the father and the mother who give birth to the child or as the intellect and the heart which give birth to will-power. The triangle in essence, simply represents completeness; it represents a man’s life.
Diamond: is two triangles upside down. Often present on kente worn by kings during big ceremonies, it symbolizes the existential duality of the monarch: as a chief (the bottom triangle), and as a human (the top triangle). These two are linked, meaning that both destinies as king and man are linked: all his acts as man and king, work for his prestige and that of the royal institution.
Circle: represents the infinite, with neither beginning nor end. It is analogous to power as the concept of infinity, just as eternal royalty, whose origins are often lost in the midst of time. The full circle represents the universe, the community of men. This figure of divine essence is found on almost all kente worn during the enthronement of the king to remind all of his divine character.
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