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Dush-toh
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A dush-toh, also spelled dush-too, dush-tooh, or dush-tuh, is a customary hair ornament worn by girls and women during dances, particularly the . "Summer Youth Camp." Caddo Nation: Heritage and Culture. (retrieved 3 Feb 2010) Neighboring tribes, such as the Kickapoo and Delaware, have similar women's hair ornaments.

A dush-toh consists of an embellished, butterfly- or hourglass-shaped frame that is worn on the back of the head with ribbons that flow down the back, almost to the ground. They were made in the 19th and 20th centuries,Ellison 11 as well as into the present.


Frame
The top of the butterfly-shaped frame is typically 4.25 inches wide and the bottom is usually 4-5/8 inches wide. The frame is 7.5 inches tall. The frame can be covered in black felt and edged with colored ribbons on both sides. Further embellishments include white sewn along the edges and silver studs placed according to the individual's preference. A silver band runs around the narrowest point of the frame, which is tied to the hair.Newkumet and Meredith, 42 A wooden hairpin can also be used to hold the dush-toh in place. spots can be attached to the frame and beaded rosettes may be used to decorate the center of the frame.


Ribbons
The ribbons, usually of , are attached to the bottom of the headpiece. Four layers of ribbons are typically sewn to one ribbon band, which is sewn to the felt on the frame. Ribbons can be solid colors or plaid. They run down the back to the hemline of the dancer's dress. Bells, or cai'-coo-tze, can be sewn to the bottom for weight and a musical sound. Ribbons can be embellished with shell, mirrors, medallions, or beadwork rosettes.


Classes
The Caddo Nation offers classes in making dush-tohs to Caddo youth during their annual summer camp.


Notes
  • Ellison, Rosemary. Contemporary Southern Plains Indian Metalwork. Anadarko, OK: Oklahoma Indian Arts and Crafts Cooperative, 1976. Library of Congress Number 75-40659.
  • Newkumet, Vynola Beaver and Howard L. Meredith. Hasinai: A Traditional History of the Caddo People. College Station: Texas A&M Press, 1988. .


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