China Daily

UN recognizes Panama’s hats — no, not those ones

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LA PINTADA, Panama — Cultural authoritie­s at UNESCO have recognized the artisans of Panama for their distinctiv­e woven hats. No, not those hats; the famed “Panama hat” comes from Ecuador.

Panama’s real contributi­on to the world’s hat heritage is the pintao, or painted hat, handmade from five different plants and a dose of swamp mud.

Production of the circularbr­immed hats is still a family affair carried out on a household scale. The industry’s center is La Pintada, a district about 170 kilometers west of Panama City.

“They don’t have anything (artificial), no machinery; no factory as such exists here in La Pintada,” said Reinaldo Quiros, a well-known artisan and designer who sells hats out of his home.

“Each artisan in his own home makes the hats maintainin­g the techniques taught by his ancestors.”

The widely known “Panama hat” is a brimmed hat traditiona­lly made in Ecuador from the straw of the South American toquilla palm plant. The hats are thought to have earned their misleading name because many were sold in nearby Panama to prospector­s traveling through that country to California during the Gold Rush.

Artisans of the truly Panamanian pintao hat start with the fibers of several plants that are cured and then woven into braids that are wrapped around a wooden form and sewn together from the crown of the hat down.

Pasion Gutierrez, 81, grows some of the plants around his house in El Jaguito outside La Pintada, while others are found high in the mountains.

Family work

Gutierrez, his wife Anazaria and several of their children and grandchild­ren make pintao hats. His eyesight doesn’t allow him to do the fine needlework anymore, but he harvests, prepares and braids the fibers.

Several bands of fiber are dyed black with the leaves from a different plant and then stuck in mud for three days. The fibers are woven into fine geometric designs and integrated into the hat giving it its name.

“The pintao hat has become an integral part of regional outfits throughout the country worn during traditiona­l dances and community festivitie­s,” the United Nations’ heritage arm’s statement said.

Depending on the quality of the work some pintao hats can cost hundreds of dollars.

 ?? ARNULFO FRANCO / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Anasaria Ortiz (left), 74, her son Juan Carlos Gutierrez, 37, and her husband Pasion Gutierrez, 81, pose for a portrait wearing traditiona­l Panamanian pintao hats in El Jaguito, Panama.
ARNULFO FRANCO / ASSOCIATED PRESS Anasaria Ortiz (left), 74, her son Juan Carlos Gutierrez, 37, and her husband Pasion Gutierrez, 81, pose for a portrait wearing traditiona­l Panamanian pintao hats in El Jaguito, Panama.

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