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Facts About The Akwete ( Igbo ) Fabric.

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Akwete is vintage indigenous fabric from Nigeria. It was a sacred cloth passed down from generation to generation that had unfortunately been overlooked by most people because of it's locality (I wonder why though. Don't the Yoruba people from Abeokuta still cherish the "Adire" fabric? #deepthought). Before the introduction of coinage currency in Igboland, cloth was used as trade, good and currency item. It is worn for body beautification and decoration, and for ceremonies. Cloth is also a material of great economic, cultural, political and social importance. Cloth weaving is an ancient craft of the Igbo people dating to the early new stone age when Igbos learnt to make a rough kind of clothing from the fibers of flax plants. However, these days, raffia and cotton are most-widely used for cloth-weaving in Igboland. In times past, Igbos, were famous for Akwete traditional fabric weaving. Akwete is a local homespun cotton cloth worn by men as narrow-strip cloth