This bilum is made from woven acrylic wool, it is large and soft, it will expand as you fill it, carry a baby or groceries.
Size: the opening is 57cm wide, the bottom is 60cm wide, the body of the bag is 35cm height, the strap is 120cm long (adjustable strap, tie knot where you would like)
Colour: Beige and colourful dots
In the Eastern Highlands of Papua New Guinea, particularly around Goroka, bilum weaving is more than a craft—it is a generational practice deeply embedded in women’s lives, passed from mother to daughter over centuries. Women gather in communal spaces, often weaving while sharing stories, raising children, and supporting one another. Traditionally using natural fibres made from the bark of local trees such as the tulip tree (Hibiscus tiliaceus), these women twist and loop each thread by hand, embedding personal and cultural narratives into every bag.
For many, especially single mothers and women with limited education, bilum weaving is the primary source of income and a pathway to economic independence. Visionary leaders like Florence Jaukae Kamel, known as the "Bilum Meri," have transformed this ancestral art into a platform for empowerment, founding cooperatives, training weavers, and advocating for women's rights. Under her leadership, bilum designs have been showcased on international runways and used in advocacy campaigns to highlight gender-based violence and reproductive health.
Each bilum not only tells a story through its patterns—signifying life stages, resilience, and social identity—but also represents the strength and creativity of the women who make them, binding tradition, survival, and self-expression into a single woven thread.