Virginia Makes

Virginia Makes Using exceptional fabrics and materials to make clothes for the fun of it. Love the creative process
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Park by the mansion on the lake and enter through cutting room into studio.

12/17/2025

Naturally Dyed Napkins from Maiwa course, Journey into Indigo, are being gifted to brother John Johns in Ruidoso, NM.

11/28/2025
Hand-sewn silk baby comforter dyed in my Date Vat of Indigo in Sanders Mansion. A labor of love for my husband’s first g...
11/28/2025

Hand-sewn silk baby comforter dyed in my Date Vat of Indigo in Sanders Mansion. A labor of love for my husband’s first great-grandbaby.

Savoring my Journey into Indigo. Made from Banana vat 1. 10/3/2025 on lace doily from grandparents.
10/03/2025

Savoring my Journey into Indigo. Made from Banana vat 1. 10/3/2025 on lace doily from grandparents.

Loving an 8 week course by Maiwa titled Journey Into Indigo. Scoured yards of silk, linen and cotton and about to make a...
09/19/2025

Loving an 8 week course by Maiwa titled Journey Into Indigo. Scoured yards of silk, linen and cotton and about to make another banana vat.

08/17/2025
Let’s Cook up some color at my place!
08/17/2025

Let’s Cook up some color at my place!

Planning a trip to Oaxaca!
08/05/2025

Planning a trip to Oaxaca!

The outfit shown in the image is a traditional Tehuana dress, famously worn by the Mexican artist Frida Kahlo. This distinctive attire holds deep cultural and political symbolism. Kahlo adopted the Tehuana dress as a statement of identity, expressing her cultural heritage and political convictions. The dress is traditionally associated with Zapotec women from the Isthmus of Tehuantepec in the Oaxaca region of Mexico, who were seen as symbols of economic independence and strength. By wearing this traditional outfit, Kahlo emphasized her roots and proudly embraced her Indigenous Mexican identity. Beyond its symbolic meaning, the Tehuana dress also served a personal function: it helped conceal the damage to her body caused by polio and a life-changing accident. Her choice of this attire was influenced by her Oaxacan heritage, post-revolutionary nationalism, and the history of the Zapotec people. A typical Tehuana ensemble includes a huipil (a tunic blouse), a floral skirt, traditional jewelry made of gold and silver, and brightly colored ribbons adorned with flowers braided into the hair—elements that became iconic in Frida Kahlo’s image and artistic legacy.

Address

Sanders Estate, 5516 S 277th Street, Auburn
Seattle, WA

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