
This is a 'bayong' which was mostly used in the early days in the Philippines when plastic bags were not commonly used yet.
The 'bayong' is a handwoven bag made from palm, pandan or sea grass leaves. The leaves are then dried and cut into strips before it gets woven into a bag.
The 'bayong' is very durable and will last a long time. I even remember that my lola (grandmother) used to carry a bayong. As you can see on the illustration, it was mainly used for buying items from the market like meat, fruits and vegetables.
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Sunday, November 9, 2008
Reusable bag in the Philippines
Posted by
oicned
at
11:10 PM
Labels: bayong, philippines, reusable bags
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7 comments:
Hi,
My name is Lara Glew. I've just visited your site and I was wondering if you'd be interested in exchanging links with my website. I can offer you a home page link back from my Recycling website which would be (http://www.lara-glew.com).
Your link will be placed here:
http://www.lara-glew.com (It`s a recycling website)
As mentioned, your link would be placed on the site home page, not on any "links" pages which may be buried in the site somewhere.
If you are interested please add the following information to your website and kindly let me know when it´s ready and I will do the same for you in less than 24 hours, otherwise you can delete my link from your site.
TITLE: Recycling
URL: http://www.snaffleup.co.uk
DESCRIPTION: SnaffleUp The recycling web site designed to keep useful items out of landfill.
Or you can use the following html code:
Recycling Site - SnaffleUp The recycling web site designed to keep useful items out of landfill.
I hope you have a nice day and thank you for your time,
Lara Glew
this bayong bags are pieces of transformed elegant bags now in the market, locallly and globally...
Wow.. i love that! I can even use this for fashion purposes hehehe. It's truly a Filipino classic!
I remember those days...
well it's just too bulky, but this will really really help mother earth...
My name is Indra Putu Achyar.
I can add you a link on my blog, can or not?
One more point for the "bayong". It more useful than the "pera o bayong" theme we get these days.
If you do bring it to the market, tell "manang" or "manong" she/he need not put what you have just bought into a plastic bag becuse you've got your trusty "bayong" with you. :)
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