The Isle of Palm Charleston Gullah Sweetgrass Jewelry & Accessory Dish with Loop Handle

Charleston Sweetgrass Basket Gullah Small Accessory Dish - Loop Handle by Corey#2 - Buy Way of Charleston.jpg
Charleston Sweetgrass Basket Gullah Small Accessory Dish - Loop Handle by Corey - Buy Way of Charleston.jpg
Charleston Sweetgrass Basket Gullah Small Accessory Dish - Loop Handle by Corey #3 - Buy Way of Charleston.jpg
Charleston Sweetgrass Basket Gullah Small Accessory Dish - Loop Handle by Corey #4 - Buy Way of Charleston.jpg
Charleston Sweetgrass Basket Gullah Small Accessory Dish - Loop Handle by Corey#2 - Buy Way of Charleston.jpg
Charleston Sweetgrass Basket Gullah Small Accessory Dish - Loop Handle by Corey - Buy Way of Charleston.jpg
Charleston Sweetgrass Basket Gullah Small Accessory Dish - Loop Handle by Corey #3 - Buy Way of Charleston.jpg
Charleston Sweetgrass Basket Gullah Small Accessory Dish - Loop Handle by Corey #4 - Buy Way of Charleston.jpg
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The Isle of Palm Charleston Gullah Sweetgrass Jewelry & Accessory Dish with Loop Handle

$119.99

Handmade with real Sweetgrass 

Small dish with loop handle. A great little ring dish for jewelry worn that day or as an accessory dish for any table.  

Size 5 1/2” x 1 1/4” deep

We enclose cleaning instructions with all of our baskets.

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Made by Gullah artisans for more than 300 years, people in Charleston have been weaving baskets using locally-harvested bulrush, a strong yet supple marsh grass that thrives in the sandy soil of the Lowcountry. Years later sweetgrass, a softer, finer material, replaced bulrush as a primary material for weaving. Originally used as winnowing fans to separate the rice seed from its chaff, sweetgrass baskets are regarded among the nation’s most prized cultural souvenirs. The coiled sweetgrass basket is a historically significant example of African heritage transported here to South Carolina by enslaved African people. Today the West African descendants of Gullah Geechie ancestry keep the basket making tradition alive in Mount Pleasant & Charleston SC. The Smithsonian American Art Museum's permanent collection includes a sweetgrass basket made by Mary Jackson of Charleston.

Sweetgrass baskets are very durable and can be used for many applications. This is a piece of art that everyone should have in their home that will last for many years. Taking care of these baskets they have been handed down from generation to generation.

Please noteBecause these art pieces are 100% handwoven all sweetgrass basket products are one of a kind even though some of them look similar they are all different. No two pieces of sweetgrass art are the same.