246 Ka Hana Kapa. 



324. A red puakai, mole kapa, rather indefiuiteh- lined and marked with back blotches. 

 Molokai. Given b}- Mary Ailau. 



325. A yellow lined puakai kapa read}- for coloring red. Given by Mary Ailau. 



326. Portion of a kihei from the colledlion of I\Irs. Whitney, Kauai; thin hoopai 

 halua, the red noni, stamped as shown in PI. Z, 3 (frontispiece). Given b}- 

 Mar}- Ailau. 



327. Black kapa shroud, hoopai halua beat, sent to Boston from Hawaii in 1836. 

 From American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. 



[Numbers omitted are duplicates of the Museum collection.] 



340. Fragment of an ancient pa'u, yellow, stamped with alaea and nanahu (PI. L, 2). 

 343 Thick, mole Hawaiian kapa, ruled and stamped as shown in PI. P, i. From 

 A. B. C. F. M. Boston. 



344. A tough, white, Hawaiian malo of the olden time (PI. 35, 2), not unlike those 

 described by Cook. 



345. Specimen of the half perforated kapa of Hawaii. The beat is halua pawehe of the 

 united sheets, the under one being a bluish gra}- at present. Given by Gorham 

 D. Gilman of Boston. 



346. A fragment of brown (once ^-ellow? ) mole kapa stamped in black and smudged 

 .with red noni. The beauty of color and the clearness of the stamp have not been 

 reproduced in PI. Z, i, by the "three color process." Given by Gorham D. Gilman 

 of Boston. 



347. A thick, mole, Hawaiian kapa from Maui, shown in PI. U, i. Given by Gorham 

 D. Gilman. 



348. Very old Hawaiian pa'u, originally yellow hoopai and stamped with alaea and 

 nanahu, as shown in PI. L, i. 



349. A fragment of thin pepehi halua kapa, originally yellow with red and green 

 stamps (PL B, 2). 



359. A large sleeping mat of thick kapa figured with a beautiful design in fine black 

 lines; the style of ornamentation is Mafor. From the Mafor Papuans of Ansus, 

 Joby Island, Geelvink Ba}-, N. W. Xew Guinea. ColleAed by Beccari in 1S73. 

 Size 35X70 inches; the ends dentiled. Given by Enrico H. Giglioli of Florence. 



360. A fine apron of figured kapa (woman's dress) from Pisang (banana) Bay, S. W. 

 New Guinea. It is a new localit}- only recentU' exploi-ed, immediately east of 

 Utanata. The apron is fifteen inches wide and two feet long, the five dentils at 

 the base each ending in five straps five inches long. The label of the Dutch 

 colledlor fixes the date as April, 1902, and that it was "geklapti" from Brous- 

 sonctia papyrijcra^ and that the red-brown coloring matter is from the mangrove 

 bark. Given by E. H. Giglioli. 



361. A fine white, mole, fringed kapa dress from Tahiti. The fringe is dj-ed a light 

 blue in places, and there are seven bands of double fringe pasted across the sheet 

 ver}- neatly. In two places the dress is "slashed." Given by E. H. Giglioli. 



362. A portion of the Cook kapa from the Florence colledlion alreadj- referred to 

 (PI. W, 2). Given by E. H. Giglioli. 



