The post Q’ero Misa Cloth Lliqlla / Mestana / Altar Cloth / Misa Andina – Andean Inca Tradition Peru (black & red) first appeared on La Pura Medicina.
]]>199,90 €
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Original Q’ero Misa cloth / altar cloth called Mestana (or Lliqlla) from the ancient Inca tradition, made by the family of Eduardo Chura Apaza from the Q’ero nation Cusco / Peru
1 in stock
The Mestana is a sacred textile from the Q'ero tradition (the last descendants of the Inca), which is traditionally used by Q'ero elders and medicine men as the outher cloth of the Misa, the medicine bundle of the Q'eros.
Furthermore it is used for Despacho rituals or as an altar cloth.
You can use the Mestana to create a misa or a medicine bundle or to wrap sacred or ceremonial objects or Despachos (sacred offerings to the spiritual world). You can use it as a altar cloth or as a table cloth.
Size: approx. 66 x 66 cm

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The post Q’ero Misa Cloth Lliqlla / Mestana / Altar Cloth / Misa Andina – Andean Inca Tradition Peru (black & red) first appeared on La Pura Medicina.
]]>The post Q’ero Misa Cloth Lliqlla / Mestana / Altar Cloth / Misa Andina – Andean Inca Tradition Peru (red with Chacana) first appeared on La Pura Medicina.
]]>199,90 €
plus Shipping Costs
Original Q’ero Misa cloth / altar cloth called Mestana (or Lliqlla) from the ancient Inca tradition, made by the family of Eduardo Chura Apaza from the Q’ero nation Cusco / Peru
1 in stock
The Mestana is a sacred textile from the Q'ero tradition (the last descendants of the Inca), which is traditionally used by Q'ero elders and medicine men as the outher cloth of the Misa, the medicine bundle of the Q'eros.
Furthermore it is used for Despacho rituals or as an altar cloth.
You can use the Mestana to create a misa or a medicine bundle or to wrap sacred or ceremonial objects or Despachos (sacred offerings to the spiritual world). You can use it as a altar cloth or as a table cloth.
Size: approx. 66 x 66 cm

plus Shipping Costs

plus Shipping Costs

plus Shipping Costs
The post Q’ero Misa Cloth Lliqlla / Mestana / Altar Cloth / Misa Andina – Andean Inca Tradition Peru (red with Chacana) first appeared on La Pura Medicina.
]]>The post Q’ero Table Cloth Pasadizo – green first appeared on La Pura Medicina.
]]>Original price was: 222,90 €.169,90 €Current price is: 169,90 €.
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Original Q’ero table cloth / altar cloth (called Pasadizo) from the ancient Inca tradition, made by the family of Eduardo Chura Apaza from the Q’ero nation Cusco / Peru
1 in stock
This Pasadizo is made from very soft handspun baby alpaca wool that is dyed with vegetable dyes and then woven by hand. The woven symbols and patterns reflect the mythology of the Q'eros and the sacred symbols and patterns of the ancient Inca tradition.
It was made in Cusco or in the Q'ero villages in the high Andes of Peru by women of the Q'ero tradition of Eduardo Chura Apaza's family. It takes a couple of weeks to finish a such a cloth.
The craft of spinning, weaving, and dyeing has been passed down in Q'ero families for centuries and is part of the spiritual tradition of the Q'ero people. The Q'eros, who live in the high Andes of Peru, are the last descendants of the Inca and carry the ancient Inca tradition with its sacred wisdom to this day.
You can use the Pasadizo as a altar cloth or as a table cloth or as a kind of scarf.
Size: 167 x 39 cm

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plus Shipping Costs

plus Shipping Costs
The post Q’ero Table Cloth Pasadizo – green first appeared on La Pura Medicina.
]]>The post Q’ero Table Cloth Pasadizo – purple first appeared on La Pura Medicina.
]]>Original price was: 222,90 €.169,90 €Current price is: 169,90 €.
plus Shipping Costs
Original Q’ero table cloth / altar cloth (called Pasadizo) from the ancient Inca tradition, made by the family of Eduardo Chura Apaza from the Q’ero nation Cusco / Peru
1 in stock
This Pasadizo is made from very soft handspun baby alpaca wool that is dyed with vegetable dyes and then woven by hand. The woven symbols and patterns reflect the mythology of the Q'eros and the sacred symbols and patterns of the ancient Inca tradition.
It was made in Cusco or in the Q'ero villages in the high Andes of Peru by women of the Q'ero tradition of Eduardo Chura Apaza's family. It takes a couple of weeks to finish a such a cloth.
The craft of spinning, weaving, and dyeing has been passed down in Q'ero families for centuries and is part of the spiritual tradition of the Q'ero people. The Q'eros, who live in the high Andes of Peru, are the last descendants of the Inca and carry the ancient Inca tradition with its sacred wisdom to this day.
You can use the Pasadizo as a altar cloth or as a table cloth or as a kind of scarf.
Size: 211 x 45 cm
The post Q’ero Table Cloth Pasadizo – purple first appeared on La Pura Medicina.
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