“Isang Kahig, Isang Tuka” is a personal essay on hand-weaving in the Philippines, and how it is shaped by land, labor, and global systems of extraction. Rooted in collaborative learning with weavers, it looks at how material culture often labeled as “heritage” is made under conditions of precarity, and how craft carries the legacies of imperial trade, land dispossession, and forced migration.
🧵 Limited booklet edition
Run of 40 copies
$30 each (postage included)
Order Here
🧵 Limited booklet edition
Run of 40 copies
$30 each (postage included)
Order Here