CREATING A TAGUA CARVING
Tagua is the seed of the tagua palm, a tree native to the rainforests of Panama, Colombia, and Ecuador. The nuts fall naturally to the forest floor and are gathered without harming the tree. Once dried for several months, the ivory-white seed is hard enough to carve. Wounaan artisans shape each piece by hand using simple tools, then dye the surface with natural pigments and finish with a hand-polished shine. Every carving begins with a nut the size of your palm and ends as something no machine could make twice.
THE PROCESS
The Tagua Nut
The seed of the tagua palm, sometimes called "vegetable ivory." Ivory-white inside, hard as bone when dried. No two nuts are the same shape.
Natural Harvest
Tagua palms drop their nuts naturally. Artisans gather them from the rainforest floor. No tree is cut, no wildlife disturbed.
Months of Drying
Fresh tagua is soft and milky. Nuts are set out to dry for four to eight months until they harden into a material dense enough to carve.
Hand Carving
Wounaan artisans carve each piece with small chisels and knives. A single carving can take days, following the natural shape of the nut.
Hand-Painted Detail
Each piece is hand-painted with artist-grade India inks. Highly pigmented, lightfast, and waterproof when dry. Applied with dip pens and fine brushes to bring out every feature of the carving.
Finish & Seal
Once the ink dries, each piece is hand-polished and sealed. The finish locks in the color, protects the carving, and gives every figure a smooth, lasting shine.
Cultural Meaning
Tagua carving is one of the oldest living crafts in the rainforests of Central and South America. Wounaan artisans carve the animals that share their forest home. Monkeys, frogs, parrots, jaguars. Each piece is a quiet record of the species, landscapes, and stories that shaped their culture. Choosing tagua over ivory helps save elephants. Choosing handmade over machine-made helps keep this craft alive.
