








Summer Flowers full-size Apron
This full handmade apron features my Summer Flowers fabric in organic quilting cotton on a mustard background, with three ribbons running along a cotton fabric in a rich mustard colour.
It features a large pocket in the middle to keep your wooden spoons, jewelry, and any other little bits that you pick up around the kitchen.
This apron has to d-rings at the chest to make the neck tie fully adjustable for comfort.
It will fit up to a 3xl and has ties that tie around the back, but for smaller sizes the ties can tie at the side or around the front.
The large mannequin is a size M-L.
…
Bring a little bit of Indigenous magic into the kitchen while making bannock or stirring up some elk stew, in the Garden, or out in the fields and woods gathering medicine.
These ribbon aprons evoke the spirit and the strength of all the grandmothers that came before us who wore them, and our ties to the Earth and Creator. The ribbon skirt is seen in many different Indigenous and First Nations traditions and is truly one of the ties that binds us together.
I like the idea that there might be a solution as simple as an apron that you can put on to feel a little bit more like yourself. To feel a little bit more connected to your roots, and to bring that into your daily life and into sacred daily rituals and tasks like cooking, canning, preparing medicines and caring for your family.
This full handmade apron features my Summer Flowers fabric in organic quilting cotton on a mustard background, with three ribbons running along a cotton fabric in a rich mustard colour.
It features a large pocket in the middle to keep your wooden spoons, jewelry, and any other little bits that you pick up around the kitchen.
This apron has to d-rings at the chest to make the neck tie fully adjustable for comfort.
It will fit up to a 3xl and has ties that tie around the back, but for smaller sizes the ties can tie at the side or around the front.
The large mannequin is a size M-L.
…
Bring a little bit of Indigenous magic into the kitchen while making bannock or stirring up some elk stew, in the Garden, or out in the fields and woods gathering medicine.
These ribbon aprons evoke the spirit and the strength of all the grandmothers that came before us who wore them, and our ties to the Earth and Creator. The ribbon skirt is seen in many different Indigenous and First Nations traditions and is truly one of the ties that binds us together.
I like the idea that there might be a solution as simple as an apron that you can put on to feel a little bit more like yourself. To feel a little bit more connected to your roots, and to bring that into your daily life and into sacred daily rituals and tasks like cooking, canning, preparing medicines and caring for your family.