This tripple dream catcher features a tripple hoop pattern that combines a dreamcatcher and a traditional medicine wheel.
Hand crafted in the USA.
The hoop is wrapped with deerskin in your choice of leather colors, (shown in Burgandy Suede) and is available in 12" and 15" diameter sizes. The length depends on the size of the hoops, but is around 24-30" overall.
The long leather fringes are decorated with brass cones, glass crow beads and your choice of natural farm raised pheasant feathers, white or brown turkey feathers , duck feathers, or natural chicken cocque feathers (shown with furnace hackle coque feathers). It also has a large central feather and two long hanks of horse hair.
This dreamcatcher is pictured in the 12" hoop size.
Bead colors on the streamers will be chosen to compliment your choice of leather, stone, and feather colors, or you can choose your own bead colors from the glass Crow Beads shown in our Craft Supplies section. If you have a preference, just leave a comment in the comment box on your checkout form. You can choose up to two colors.
The feathers are a by-product that would have otherwise been thrown away-- no birds were killed specifically for their feathers.
Please specify the leather color and feather choices you prefer with the dropdown boxes below.
The picture shown is representative. Because each dream catcher is hand made especially for you, there may be slight variations. This is a hand made item, so allow a few days for production time, (up to a week during peak periods such as the months before Christmas), plus shipping time.
This item can be shipped internationally.However, some countries have restrictions on the importation of feathers. Feathers cannot be shipped to New Zealand. Be sure to check with your customs office if you live outside the US. We are not responsible for items seized by customs.
We will notify international customers after your order is placed, if additional shipping charges apply.
The medicine wheel represents the Four Directions, Four Colors (Races) and the Four Phases of Life.
The Dream Catcher Legend
The dream catcher comes from an Ojibwe legend. According to the legend, hanging a dream catcher near a sleeping person causes the bad dreams to be caught in the web, while the good dreams enter through the hole in the middle and drift down the feathers to the sleeping person. Then in the morning, sunlight enters through the hole to melt the bad dreams away.
The beads in a dream catcher represent bad dreams that have been caught. A dreamcatcher can be made more powerful by adding personal totems that have significance to the owner of the dream catcher, such as fur, feathers, stones, beads or claws or bits of horn from the owner's totem animals.
Not produced by a tribal member or a particular indian tribe.
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