via Pressenza, 21 August 2022: A post about the Museum of Igorot Cultures and Arts at Saint Louis University in Baguio City.
The museum has several sections, each with its own description: 1) wood arts; 2) musical instruments; 3) clothing and textiles; 4) personal adornments; 5) bags and accessories; 6) spirituality and ritual; 7) house architecture; 8) household and kitchen utensils with subsections: food bins and storage food trays and dishes; cooking utensils; food processing equipment; rice-husking implements; 9) furniture and equipment, 10) farming implements, 11) rain and sun protectors, 12) hunting, fishing, and food gathering, 13) loom (weaving) implements, 14) blacksmithing, carpentry, and wood carving, 15) gold mining and processing, 16) animal raising paraphernalia; 17) betel nut, tobacco, alcoholic drinks, 18) weaponry, 19) funerary articles. 20) photographs/ paintings of Igorot folklife, 21) prehistoric stone tools, 22) collections from other Filipino ethnic groups, 23) CICM collections and archives, and 24) miscellaneous.