Hardwood Splint Basketry
Material preparation, soaking times, and weave patterns used in Indigenous and settler basket-making traditions across Canada.
Splint Preparation
Black ash (Fraxinus nigra) is the primary splint wood in eastern Canadian basketry. Logs are pounded with a mallet to separate annual growth rings, producing flexible strips that can be woven without splitting.
Soaking & Flexibility
Dry splints require soaking before weaving. Typical soaking times range from a few minutes for thin decorative strips to several hours for structural uprights. Water temperature and splint thickness both affect how long is needed.
Weave Patterns
Plain twill, diagonal twill, and hexagonal weaves are documented across both Indigenous and settler traditions in Canada. Pattern complexity is determined by the number of splints worked over and under in each sequence.
Reference Articles
Craft Guides
Detailed reference on the three core aspects of hardwood splint basketry: preparing the material, controlling flexibility through soaking, and executing traditional weave structures.
Hardwood Splint Preparation: From Log to Weaving Strip
How black ash and white oak logs are processed into usable splints — felling, seasoning, pounding, and cutting to width for different basket types.
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Soaking Times and Weave Patterns in Splint Basket Construction
Practical guidance on soaking duration by splint type, followed by a breakdown of plain, twill, and diagonal weave sequences used in utility and decorative baskets.
Read article →Indigenous and Settler Basket Traditions with Hardwood Splints in Canada
A comparative look at how Mi'kmaq, Maliseet, and Haudenosaunee makers developed splint basketry, and how settler craftspeople adapted similar techniques in the 18th and 19th centuries.
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Key Reference Points
What Defines Hardwood Splint Basketry
- Black ash (Fraxinus nigra) is the most widely documented splint wood in eastern Canadian basket traditions, particularly among Mi'kmaq, Maliseet (Wolastoqiyik), and Haudenosaunee makers.
- Pounding separates the wood along annual growth rings. Each growth ring produces one splint layer. Slower-growing trees in moister sites typically produce thinner, more flexible rings.
- White oak splints are split along the grain rather than pounded and are more common in Appalachian and southern Ontario settler traditions than in eastern Indigenous work.
- The base structure of a splint basket — the bottom — determines the spacing of uprights and constrains which weave patterns are practical for the sides.
- Black ash is currently under pressure from the emerald ash borer (Agrilus planipennis), which has significantly reduced available material in parts of Ontario and Quebec.
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