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    • Grand Opening of the Gallery Kaitetu
    • Presentation
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    • Acknowledgments
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    • Traditional Carpentry Techniques
    • The Wapauwe Mosque Roof
    • The Sago Palm
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    • Carpentry Workshop
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  • Aliph project
    • Grand Opening of the Gallery Kaitetu
    • Presentation
    • Seminar
  • About
    • Team and partners
    • Acknowledgments
  • Gallery Kaitetu Exhibition
    • History of Kaitetu
    • Conservatory of a Unique Spice Route Heritage
    • The Wapauwe Mosque
    • Kaitetu Quran Manuscripts Collection
    • Tukang 12
    • Traditional Carpentry Techniques
    • The Wapauwe Mosque Roof
    • The Sago Palm
  • Workshops
    • All Workshops
    • Carpentry Workshop
    • Maluku Cooking Classes
    • Traditional Fishing Workshop
  • Photo gallery
  • Resources
  • Contacts

Carpentry Workshop

Learn traditional Maluku woodworking techniques with master carpenters who use local materials including sago leaves roof thatch, complex rope work made with gamutu or ijuk (Arenga Pinnata) threads, and ‘Gaba-Gaba’ panels from the sago tree midribs and bambu pegs.

WORKSHOP TRAILER

MAKING LULEBA STRINGS


Binding techniques are key to Maluku architecture.

Make a fine bamboo string to fasten the sago (rumbia) thatch roof.

Luleba is the green outer skin (exodermis) of the young bamboo cane/culm taken between two nodes.

MAKING GAMUTU ROPES


Twist and wind Gamutu fibers into a thin continuous strand like a traditional Maluku craftsman and learn more about the fascinating process of joinery.

Gamutu is the word used in Maluku for strings or cords made of the coarse black fibers from the petioles (leaf stems) of the aren palm or palm (Arenga pinnata).

STITCHING A THATCH ROOF


Sew sago (rumbia) palms together with Luleba strings to create the thatch roof.

Binding techniques are used to fasten the roof on the building’s structure but also to tie together different parts of the building’s structure.

Are you interested?

To know more about this project, please contact us through our instagram

The ALIPH Foundation (International Alliance for the Preservation of Heritage in Conflict Areas)

École française d’Extrême-Orient (EFEO)

Directorate of Culture (Ministry of Education, Culture, Research and Technology)

Cultural Conservation Bureau in Ambon (BPK XX) 

Maritime Asia Heritage Survey (MAHS)

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