WEAVING A MASK
Woven masks begin as a bundle of shredded chunga palm fiber, harvested from the rainforests of eastern Panama and northwestern Colombia. Emberá artisans split the fronds into fine strands, dye them with natural pigments from rainforest plants, and weave each mask entirely by hand. The curve of a beak, the roundness of a crown, the texture of feathers. Every shape is built through the weave itself, not carved or pressed into form. A single mask can take weeks or even months to complete.
THE PROCESS
The Chunga Palm
Chunga is a spiny palm that grows wild in the rainforests of Panama and Colombia. Its young fronds are flexible, strong, and perfect for fine weaving.
Natural Harvest
Only the young, unopened fronds are cut. The palm continues to grow, and new fronds replace what was taken. No tree is lost.
Splitting the Fiber
Each frond is stripped by hand into long, fine strands, some as thin as thread. This step alone takes hours and determines how tight the final weave can be.
Natural Color
Colors come from the rainforest itself. Liana vines gathered from the canopy, wild trumpet vine blossoms, and saffron threads for gold. Each fiber is dyed until the color holds fast, with no synthetic pigment added.
Hand Weaving
Each mask is woven one strand at a time, working from a bundle of shredded fiber into a finished form. The beak, crown, and feathered texture are all built through the weave. Depending on the size and complexity, a single mask can take weeks or even months.
Finished Form
Once the weave is complete, the mask is trimmed and shaped. No two are alike. Every mask carries the small differences that reveal the hand of the artisan who made it.
Cultural Meaning
Emberá weavers depict the animals that share their rainforest home. Owls, jaguars, hummingbirds, toucans, frogs, parrots. In Emberá tradition, masks are ceremonial. Shamans place them inside homes to drive out bad spirits, illness, misfortune, and stagnant energy. Today they live on as living art: handwoven sculptures that carry the story of a species, a spirit, and the hand of one weaver working in the forest where the fibers grew.
Fair Trade
Made in Panama
Hand-woven by Emberá artisans in the Darién rainforest. Every mask supports the weavers, preserves a centuries-old tradition, and protects the forest where the fibers are grown.
