Dreamcatchers originated with Native Americans. Their purpose was to ward off evil spirits and help make the individual feel more at ease. Typically, they were meant to "hover where they slept" as a way to lock in a good nights sleep. Dreamcatchers would catch the nightmares known as evil spirits from the Gods, and this would help them to become stronger.
they use it to make plates .
There is no evidence that any native American tribe made or used dreamcatchers before the 1960s - except, perhaps, for the Ojibwe. Many tribes made netted hoops, both as targets for the hoop and pole game or (in smaller versions) as hair ornaments for warriors. These may have been misidentified as dreamcatchers by people with no knowledge of native culture.
To make an art project about the Miami Indians' village, you can use toothpicks to represent the houses and fences.
animal skin and long wooden poles.
Indians use there instrument to make music
Dreamcatchers - 2012 was released on: USA: June 2012
No, dreamcatchers were not fads in the 1970s because they was used in the age of the Ancient Americas, not the 1970s.
Dreamcatchers originated with Native Americans. Their purpose was to ward off evil spirits and help make the individual feel more at ease. Typically, they were meant to "hover where they slept" as a way to lock in a good nights sleep. Dreamcatchers would catch the nightmares known as evil spirits from the Gods, and this would help them to become stronger.
they use it to make plates .
the dreamcatchers allow good dreams to pass through a hole in the middle while bad dreams get caught in the net and stay there until they are fried by the sun.
The colonist did not try to make themselves look like Indians.
they use mammoth skin
yes
deer hides
they use wampum
hair