Market Hammocks in El Casco by Diana Sainz
by Diana Raquel Sainz
Title
Market Hammocks in El Casco by Diana Sainz
Artist
Diana Raquel Sainz
Medium
Photograph - Photography - Digital Photography
Description
El Casco Viejo, Panama City Panama
FEATURED IMAGE: Fabric and Clothing ~ FAA ~ 07/08/2014
FEATURED IMAGE: For The Love Of Color ~ FAA ~ 06/29/2014
FEATURED IMAGE: Google Gallery ~ FAA ~ 06/27/2014
FEATURED IMAGE: Beauty ~ FAA ~ 06/26/2014
El Casco Viejo, Panama City Panama
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Panamanian native handicrafts rival Mexico's in their beauty and creativity. The markets are filled with vibrant and colorful handcrafted items of all kinds. From hammocks, blankets, clothing, paintings, pottery.... the colors are tremendously wonderful and the vendors are delightfully proud.
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Casco Viejo is located on the Western end of Panama City along the bay. It is a Peninsula jutting off the coast in between Balboa Avenue and the Amador Causeway.
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Casco Viejo is the oldest city on the Pacific Coast of the Americas, and lies at the foot of the Panama Canal on one side and Panama City on the other. The area now serves as one of the country�s most popular tourist attractions, frequented by tourist guides and photographers alike. The architecture is a combination of ruins from the days of Spanish Explorers, Pirates, and French Colonists from the first attempt made on the Panama Canal by the French. Balconies are filled with flowers such as geraniums and bougainvillea wrapped around sculpted wrought iron railings. There are Historical plazas with such figures as heroic Generals on horseback like Liberador Simon B�livar, which has his statue situated in the center of Plaza Bolivar. The Church of San Francisco (La Iglesia de San Francisco), National Theater (El Teatro Nacional), Hotel Colonial, and B�livar College (Colegio Bolivar) are all attractions to visit in the historic area.
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This neighborhood has a mixture of architecture, social classes, restaurants, monuments, and plazas. There is a small feel to this neighborhood and neighbors tend to know each other well with many residents sitting in outdoor cafes or hanging out on their balconies.
Leave Panama with an authentic handicraft made by one of Panama's seven living indigenous tribes. The most popular are "molas," intricate reverse appliqu� embroidery sewn by the woman of the Kuna Indian tribe. Other handicrafts include the hand-woven baskets of the Embera Indians of the Darien jungle�similar to baskets woven by Navajo Indians�and tagua nut sculptures, which are tiny figures skillfully carved from the tropical tagua nut.
Panama Handicrafts Molas
Uploaded
June 26th, 2014
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