All Object Lessons
Belief & Identity

The Tapa Cloth: Bark Beaten Into Beauty

⏱ 45 minutes 🎓 Primary & Secondary 📚 art, history, science, citizenship, language
Core question How did Pacific women, beating tree bark for thousands of years, create one of the world's great textile traditions — and what does the tapa cloth teach us about the patience of women's work?
A piece of tapa cloth from the Pacific. The cloth is made by beating tree bark — not by weaving threads. The patterns are added afterwards by stencil, stamp, or hand. Each region of the Pacific has its own designs. Photo: Remi Jouan / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 3.0
Introduction

Across the islands of the Pacific — from Hawaii in the north to Tonga and Samoa in the centre to Fiji in the west — there is a way of making cloth that does not involve weaving. The cloth is made by beating tree bark. Specifically, the inner bark of the paper mulberry tree (and sometimes other trees) is stripped, soaked, and beaten flat with wooden mallets. The beating spreads the bark out, breaking it down into a wide, thin, soft, strong sheet. Several beaten strips are then joined together by overlapping their edges and beating again, producing one large continuous cloth. The cloth is called tapa in English. In Samoa it is siapo. In Tonga, ngatu. In Hawaii, kapa. In Fiji, masi. In Niue, hiapo. Each island has its own word and its own traditions. Tapa is mostly made by women, often working together in groups, often singing while they work. The beating produces a rhythmic sound that can be heard across a village. Once the cloth is made, patterns are added — stencilled, stamped, or painted by hand. Each region has distinctive patterns. Tongan ngatu often has bold geometric designs. Samoan siapo has fine line patterns made with stencils cut from banana leaves. Fijian masi often uses brown and black on cream. Hawaiian kapa was traditionally beaten thinner than other tapa, with patterns dyed in bright colours. Tapa has been used for clothing, sleeping mats, ceremonial gifts at weddings and funerals, decorative wall hangings, and many other purposes. Some Tongan ngatu pieces are over 30 metres long, made by groups of women working together for weeks. The lesson asks how this tradition works, what it has meant to Pacific peoples, and what we can learn from a craft that was practised for thousands of years before any factory existed.

The object
Origin
Pacific Islands. Different names in different places: siapo (Samoa), ngatu (Tonga), kapa (Hawaii), masi (Fiji), hiapo (Niue), ʻuha (Tahiti), tapa (general Pacific term used in English). Made across most of Polynesia, parts of Melanesia, and parts of Micronesia.
Period
At least 2,000 years and probably longer. Still made today, especially in Samoa, Tonga, Fiji, and Niue.
Made of
The inner bark of certain trees, most often the paper mulberry (Broussonetia papyrifera), but also breadfruit, fig, and others. The bark is stripped from the tree, soaked in water, and then beaten with wooden mallets on a wooden anvil until it spreads out wide and thin and soft.
Size
A small piece of tapa might be 1 metre by 1 metre. Large ceremonial tapa, especially Tongan ngatu, can be over 30 metres long and 4 metres wide, made by groups of women working together for weeks.
Number of objects
Many thousands of pieces are made each year across the Pacific, both for traditional use and for sale. Historical tapa is in museums worldwide.
Where it is now
Made in homes and community workshops across the Pacific. Major collections are at the Bishop Museum in Honolulu, the Te Papa Museum in Wellington, the British Museum, the Smithsonian, and many Pacific national museums.
Before you teach this — reflect

Questions for you

  1. Tapa is mostly made by women, but women's work is often invisible in history. How will you teach this honestly?
  2. The Pacific has many different traditions, all of which are real and distinct. How will you respect this variety rather than collapsing them?
  3. Tapa is a living tradition that has changed and adapted over time. How will you teach the change as part of the tradition's strength?

Common student difficulties — tick any you have noticed

Discovery sequence
1
Imagine a Pacific island a thousand years ago. There are no cotton fields. There are no sheep for wool. There is no silk industry. The people of the island still need clothing, sleeping mats, gifts to give at weddings and funerals. The answer comes from the trees. The paper mulberry tree (called u'a or hiapo or by other names depending on the island) has a special inner bark. When you strip the bark off, soak it in water, and beat it carefully with a wooden mallet, the bark spreads out — wider, thinner, softer, but still strong. By beating several strips and joining them together by overlapping the edges, you can make a single cloth as large as you want. Why might Pacific peoples develop this technique?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because Pacific islands are small, often without large-scale agriculture or animal herds. Cotton, wool, and silk all require resources Pacific islands do not always have. But trees grow well in island climates. The paper mulberry was carried by Pacific voyagers from Asia and planted on island after island as people settled the Pacific. Once the technique was established, it produced cloth as good as woven fabric in many ways: lightweight for hot climates, warm enough for cool nights, strong enough to last for years if cared for. The technique was also energy-efficient — no spinning of thread, no looms, no complex equipment. Just bark, water, a wooden anvil, a wooden mallet, and skilled hands. Students should see that 'making cloth' is not the same as 'weaving cloth'. Different cultures around the world have made cloth in many ways. The Pacific tapa tradition is one of the world's great alternative paths. It produces a different texture, a different aesthetic, and a different relationship between cloth and tree.

2
Making tapa is mostly women's work. In Tonga, women gather in special houses called 'tukutuku' to beat ngatu together. In Samoa, women working on siapo often sing — old songs that go with the rhythm of the beating. The mallets (called ike) are made of hard wood, with grooves carved on the working surface that help spread the bark. The anvil (called tutua) is a long wooden beam, often passed down through generations. The sound of tapa-making — the rhythmic beating of dozens of mallets in a village — is one of the characteristic sounds of Pacific life. In some traditional Tongan songs, the beating itself becomes part of the music. Why might one craft be so connected to women's community?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

For several reasons. First: tapa-making is hard, repetitive, slow work. It is easier and more pleasant when done together. The conversation, the songs, the company make the hours pass. Second: it is teachable work. Older women teach younger women, daughters work with mothers and grandmothers. The craft is passed down through generations of women. Third: the products are often gifts. A bride brings tapa to her marriage. A family gives tapa to honour someone who has died. Mothers and aunts make tapa for important ceremonies. The work is socially embedded — what women make goes back into the social fabric. Fourth: it is one of the few traditional arts where women have been the recognised masters. In many cultures, women's craft has been less honoured than men's craft. In tapa, women are the experts and the teachers. The skill is real and respected. Students should see that 'women's work' is not a small thing. The tapa tradition is one of the world's great textile achievements, and it has been built almost entirely by women. End the discovery on this honour.

3
Different Pacific islands have very different tapa traditions. Tongan ngatu is famously large — pieces can be 30 metres long and 4 metres wide. Made by groups of women working together for weeks. Decorated with bold black designs, often featuring crowns, lions, or king's symbols (Tonga has been a kingdom continuously since the 19th century). Used for major events: royal occasions, weddings, funerals. Samoan siapo is often smaller and uses delicate stencilled patterns made with banana leaves. Brown and red and black ink, on a cream background. Fine line work. Fijian masi is similar but uses different specific patterns, with strong geometric designs. Hawaiian kapa was traditionally beaten thinner than most other Pacific tapa, with bright dyed colours and elaborate patterns. Hawaiian kapa-making mostly stopped in the 19th century after Western cloth replaced it; in recent decades, Hawaiian artists have been reviving the tradition. Why do island traditions vary so much?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because each island developed its own visual language over centuries. Distance between islands is great in the Pacific. A Tongan woman in 1800 might never have seen a Samoan siapo, even though Samoa is only 800 km away. Each tradition developed its own colours, patterns, and uses. This is true of textile traditions everywhere — Welsh tartan is different from Scottish tartan, Indian saris are different region by region, Indonesian batik varies by island and town. Pacific tapa is one of many places where geographical separation produced regional richness. There are also similarities, of course. The basic technique (beating bark) is the same across the region. The use of tapa for weddings and funerals is widespread. The role of women is consistent. Students should see that 'Pacific tapa' is not one thing — it is a family of related traditions, each with its own specific identity. Knowing the differences is part of basic respect for each Pacific people.

4
In the 19th century, Western cotton cloth began to flood the Pacific. It was cheaper than tapa to acquire and easier to maintain. Western missionaries also discouraged some traditional uses of tapa. Many island traditions of tapa-making weakened or stopped. But not everywhere. In Tonga, the kingdom continued to value ngatu, and the tradition has remained strong. Tongan women still make ngatu for major events — royal occasions, weddings, funerals. Samoa has kept its siapo tradition. Fijian masi continues. In recent decades, there have been active revivals: in Hawaii (where artists like Marie McDonald have led the kapa revival), in the Cook Islands, in Niue. The traditions are also adapting. Some contemporary Pacific artists use tapa techniques for fine art exhibited in galleries. Some use modern dyes alongside traditional ones. Some make smaller pieces for the tourist market, while keeping the large ceremonial pieces for traditional use. What does it mean for a tradition to survive?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Adaptation. Tapa has survived where it has been allowed to change. Tongan ngatu still uses traditional techniques but now often features modern symbols (the king's image, the date of an event). Samoan siapo artists today incorporate themes from current life. Hawaiian kapa is being relearned by women whose grandmothers had stopped making it. The tradition is alive because it is not frozen. This is the same lesson many other lessons in this collection have reached: kintsugi, the tea ceremony, kente cloth, all are alive because they have stayed flexible. Students should see that 'authentic' does not mean 'unchanged'. The most authentic thing about a living tradition is that it is alive — that it is being practised, taught, and adapted by people who care about it. The Pacific tapa tradition is alive in this sense. Pacific women are still beating bark. The cloth is still being made. The patterns are still being added. The tradition continues. End the lesson here. The mallets are still rising and falling. The next ngatu is being made.

What this object teaches

Tapa cloth is a Pacific textile tradition made by beating the inner bark of trees (most often the paper mulberry) into wide, thin, strong sheets. It is not woven. Different Pacific islands have their own names and traditions: siapo in Samoa, ngatu in Tonga, kapa in Hawaii, masi in Fiji, hiapo in Niue, and many others. The tradition is at least 2,000 years old. Tapa is mostly made by women, often working together in groups, often singing while they work. The beating produces a rhythmic sound that has been part of Pacific village life for centuries. Once the cloth is made, patterns are added by stencilling, stamping, or painting. Each region has distinctive designs. Tongan ngatu is famously large — pieces can be 30 metres long. Samoan siapo uses fine stencilled lines. Hawaiian kapa was traditionally beaten thinner with bright dyed colours. Tapa is used for clothing, sleeping mats, ceremonial gifts at weddings and funerals, decorative wall hangings, and many other purposes. The tradition was weakened in the 19th century by imported cotton cloth and missionary discouragement, but has survived strongly in Tonga, Samoa, and Fiji, and is being revived in Hawaii, Niue, and other places. Tapa is one of the world's great women's textile traditions.

QuestionWhat many people assumeWhat is actually true
Is tapa a kind of woven cloth?YesNo — it is made by beating tree bark, not by weaving threads
Is tapa one tradition?YesIt is many traditions — siapo (Samoa), ngatu (Tonga), kapa (Hawaii), masi (Fiji), hiapo (Niue), and others
Who makes tapa?AnyoneMostly women, often working in groups, often with songs that are part of the craft
How big can tapa be?About the size of a tableclothTongan ngatu can be over 30 metres long and 4 metres wide, made by groups of women over weeks
Did tapa survive Western contact?NoIt survived strongly in some places (Tonga, Samoa, Fiji) and is being revived in others (Hawaii, Niue)
Key words
Tapa
The general English name for Pacific bark cloth. Made by beating the inner bark of trees, especially the paper mulberry, into wide thin sheets. Different Pacific islands have different specific names.
Example: A typical piece of tapa is about 1 to 3 mm thick. Strips of beaten bark are joined together by overlapping their edges and beating again. The result is one continuous cloth.
Ngatu
The Tongan word for tapa. Tongan ngatu is famously large — pieces can be 30 metres long and 4 metres wide. Made by groups of women working together for weeks.
Example: Ngatu is essential at major Tongan ceremonies — royal events, weddings, funerals. The piece given to a couple at their wedding can become a family heirloom.
Siapo
The Samoan word for tapa. Samoan siapo often uses fine stencilled patterns made with banana leaves, in brown, red, and black ink on a cream background.
Example: A Samoan siapo might use 50 different stencil patterns to build up a complex design. Each pattern is cut from a banana leaf and used many times.
Kapa
The Hawaiian word for tapa. Hawaiian kapa was traditionally beaten thinner than most other Pacific tapa, with bright dyed colours and elaborate patterns. The tradition mostly stopped in the 19th century but has been revived since the 1970s.
Example: Master Hawaiian kapa makers today, like the late Puanani Van Dorpe and Marie McDonald, have spent decades reviving and teaching the craft.
Paper mulberry
A small tree (Broussonetia papyrifera) native to East Asia, brought to the Pacific by early Polynesian voyagers. Its inner bark is the most common material for tapa.
Example: Pacific peoples carried paper mulberry seeds and cuttings on their voyaging canoes for thousands of years, planting the tree on each island they settled.
Ike
The Tongan and Samoan word for the wooden mallet used to beat the bark. Made of hard wood, with grooves carved on the working surface to help spread the bark.
Example: A skilled tapa-maker has several ike — different sizes and groove patterns for different stages of beating. The ike is often passed down from mother to daughter.
Use this in other subjects
  • Geography: On a map of the Pacific Ocean, mark the major tapa-making regions: Tonga, Samoa, Fiji, Niue, Hawaii, Cook Islands, and many others. Discuss how each is a small population on a small island, with its own distinct tapa tradition. The Pacific is a region of variety, not uniformity.
  • Science: Discuss the structure of bark. Trees have an outer bark (rough, protective) and an inner bark (called bast or phloem, soft and full of fibres). Tapa is made from the inner bark. The fibres are what make the cloth strong even after beating. Try a simple experiment: peel a small green branch and look at its inner layers.
  • History: Build a class timeline of Pacific tapa: ancient Pacific settlement and tapa-making (over 2,000 years), European arrival (1700s onwards), missionary period and decline (1800s), survival in Tonga and Samoa (continuing), revival in Hawaii (1970s onwards). The tradition is older than most European nation-states.
  • Art: Look at images of tapa from different Pacific regions. Note the different patterns. Each student designs a small piece of tapa on paper, choosing a colour scheme and pattern that means something to them. Discuss: each pattern is a small piece of designed art, with reasons for its choices. Real tapa-makers think the same way.
  • Citizenship: Tapa is mostly made by women. In many cultures, women's work has been less honoured than men's. Discuss why this is, and what it means that tapa is one of the world's great textile traditions, almost entirely built by women. Other lessons in this collection (the Marshallese stick chart, the dreamcatcher) raise similar questions about whose work is recognised.
  • Language: On the board, write the names: tapa (general), siapo (Samoa), ngatu (Tonga), kapa (Hawaii), masi (Fiji), hiapo (Niue). Discuss: each language has its own word for the same kind of object. Knowing the specific name is part of basic respect for the specific people and tradition.
Common misconceptions
Wrong

Tapa is a kind of woven cloth.

Right

It is made by beating tree bark, not by weaving threads. The beating spreads the bark fibres into a wide thin sheet. The result is closer to felt than to woven cloth.

Why

This is one of the most basic facts about tapa. Knowing it is knowing what tapa actually is.

Wrong

All Pacific islands make the same tapa.

Right

Each region has its own tradition with its own name (siapo, ngatu, kapa, masi, hiapo, and many others), its own patterns, its own techniques, its own uses. The Pacific is a region of variety.

Why

Lumping all Pacific Islander cultures together is a common error. The Pacific has hundreds of distinct peoples, each with their own traditions.

Wrong

Tapa is a 'lost' tradition.

Right

It survived strongly in Tonga, Samoa, and Fiji throughout the 20th century. It has been revived in Hawaii, Niue, and other places since the 1970s. Tapa is alive today, with active makers across the Pacific.

Why

'Lost' is what outsiders sometimes say about traditions they cannot see in their own neighbourhoods. The tapa tradition is alive, just not in the places where most outsiders look.

Wrong

Tapa is just 'craft' rather than 'art'.

Right

It is sophisticated textile art, with thousands of years of refinement and a complex visual language. Pacific tapa is in the collections of major art museums worldwide and is studied by serious scholars. The 'craft versus art' distinction is one outsiders have sometimes used to dismiss women's work and Indigenous work; it does not reflect what tapa actually is.

Why

Calling tapa 'craft' (in the dismissive sense) is one of the ways the tradition has been undervalued. It deserves the same respect as any major textile tradition.

Teaching this with care

Treat tapa as a major living textile tradition with thousands of years of history. Use the specific Pacific names — siapo, ngatu, kapa, masi, hiapo — alongside the general English 'tapa'. Be careful not to lump all Pacific Islander cultures together; the Pacific has hundreds of distinct peoples, each with their own traditions. Honour the women who make tapa. The tradition is mostly women's work, and women's work has often been undervalued in history. The tapa lesson is one place to give this honour clearly. Be aware that some Pacific Islander students may have personal connections to specific tapa traditions; give them space to share if they want, but do not put them on the spot. Be careful with the term 'primitive' — never use it. Tapa is a sophisticated tradition that produces remarkable results from simple materials. Be honest about the missionary-era decline of tapa-making in some places (Hawaii especially) without making the lesson into a heavy critique of missionaries or of Christianity. Many Pacific Islander Christians today are involved in tapa revival; the relationship between Christianity and traditional Pacific cultures is complex. Avoid the framing of 'authentic vs. modern' — modern Pacific tapa-makers are authentic. Tradition that adapts is more authentic than tradition that freezes. If you have students from any of the major tapa-making regions (Tonga, Samoa, Fiji, Hawaii especially), they may know specific traditions; give them voice. Avoid romanticising 'simple Pacific island life' — the islands are home to complex modern societies dealing with serious challenges, including climate change. Finally, end the lesson on the present. The tradition is alive. The mallets are still rising and falling. The next piece of cloth is being made.

Check what students have understood

Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about tapa cloth.

  1. What is tapa cloth, and how is it made?

    Tapa is a Pacific cloth made by beating the inner bark of trees, most often the paper mulberry, into wide thin sheets. It is not woven. The bark is stripped, soaked, and beaten with wooden mallets until it spreads into cloth.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions both the bark beating and the absence of weaving. Specific tree (paper mulberry) is a bonus.
  2. What are some of the different names for tapa across the Pacific?

    Siapo (Samoa), ngatu (Tonga), kapa (Hawaii), masi (Fiji), hiapo (Niue), and many others. Each Pacific island has its own name and its own specific traditions.
    Marking note: Strong answers will name at least three specific traditions with their islands. Any two earn full marks.
  3. Who mostly makes tapa, and how is it usually made?

    Tapa is mostly made by women, often working together in groups. Songs that go with the rhythm of the beating are part of the craft. The work is taught from older women to younger women, generation by generation.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions both the women's role and the group/community aspect.
  4. How big can tapa be?

    Tongan ngatu can be over 30 metres long and 4 metres wide, made by groups of women working together for weeks. Other Pacific tapa is usually smaller, but still meant for major social occasions.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention the specific Tongan ngatu scale and recognise that other regions make smaller pieces.
  5. Is tapa-making still alive today?

    Yes. It survived strongly in Tonga, Samoa, and Fiji throughout the 20th century. It has been revived in Hawaii, Niue, and other places since the 1970s. Pacific women are still beating bark today.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that recognises the tradition is alive and gives at least one specific example of where.
Discuss together

These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.

  1. In your own family or community, are there crafts or skills that are mostly done by one gender? What does this say about how work is valued?

    This is a personal question. Students may suggest cooking, sewing, woodwork, gardening, repair work, child care. Push them to think about which of these are honoured publicly and which are taken for granted. The deeper point is that women's work has often been less honoured than men's. Tapa is one of the world's great textile traditions, made almost entirely by women, and deserves to be honoured for what it is.
  2. Pacific peoples carried paper mulberry seeds across thousands of kilometres of ocean to plant on every island they settled. What does this teach us about how cultures travel?

    This is a thoughtful question. Students may suggest: cultures bring their materials with them; settlers think about future generations; what you carry matters as much as where you go. Strong answers will see that the Pacific tapa tradition was a deliberate choice — Pacific voyagers ensured the tradition could continue on each new island. The same principle applies to many other migrations and traditions.
  3. Tapa is mostly made by women working together, often singing. What is gained by doing hard work together?

    This is a personal question. Students may suggest: the work goes faster, the time passes more pleasantly, you learn from each other, you build relationships. The deeper point is that 'productive work' and 'relationship work' are not always separate. The tapa tradition combines them. Many other traditions do the same — sewing circles, harvest festivals, building bees. The tapa is one of the clearest examples.
Teaching sequence
  1. THE HOOK (5 min)
    Without saying anything about the lesson, ask: 'How can you make cloth without weaving?' Take guesses. Then say: 'In the Pacific, women have made cloth from tree bark for thousands of years, by beating it. We are going to find out how, and what it means.'
  2. INTRODUCE THE OBJECT (10 min)
    Describe tapa: cloth made by beating the inner bark of trees, mostly the paper mulberry. Made across the Pacific — Tonga (ngatu), Samoa (siapo), Hawaii (kapa), Fiji (masi), Niue (hiapo), and many others. Mostly made by women, often in groups, often with songs. Pause and ask: 'Why might one craft be done by groups of women, often singing while they work?' Listen to answers. They will lead naturally into the ideas of community, teaching, and the rhythm of work.
  3. UNDO THE WRONG STORIES (15 min)
    On the board, write three statements: (1) Tapa is a kind of woven cloth. (2) All Pacific islands make the same tapa. (3) Tapa is a 'lost' tradition. Take each in turn. Replace each with what we now know — tapa is made by beating bark, not weaving; each island has its own tradition; tapa is alive today. End by asking: 'Why might these wrong stories spread?'
  4. THE RHYTHM ACTIVITY (10 min)
    In small groups, students discuss: 'In your own life or family, is there work that gets done in groups, with songs or rhythm?' Examples might include: family cooking, religious singing, sports practice, cleaning together, school chants, work songs. Each group shares one example. Discuss: rhythmic group work has been part of human cultures for thousands of years. Tapa-making is one Pacific example of a much wider human practice.
  5. CLOSING (5 min)
    Ask: 'When you next see a piece of patterned cloth, what will you wonder about it?' Take a few honest answers. End by saying: 'Pacific women have been beating bark into cloth for thousands of years. They have built one of the world's great textile traditions, mostly without being recognised in books that talk about textile traditions. The tradition is alive today, in Tonga, Samoa, Fiji, Hawaii, and many other places. The next ngatu is being made now, by a group of women in a tukutuku house, while they sing.'
Classroom materials
The Paper Mulberry Map
Instructions: On a map of the Pacific Ocean, mark places where tapa is made: Tonga, Samoa, Fiji, Niue, Hawaii, Cook Islands, Tahiti, and others. Discuss: the paper mulberry tree was carried by Pacific voyagers across thousands of kilometres of ocean to plant on each island they settled. Without the tree, tapa would not exist. The tree's journey is part of the tradition's journey.
Example: In Mr Tukuʻaho's class, students traced the paper mulberry's spread from Asia (its original home) into the Pacific over thousands of years. The teacher said: 'The Polynesian voyagers we learned about in the Hōkūleʻa lesson did not travel empty-handed. They brought the tools of their cultures with them — including the seeds of the paper mulberry. Each island they settled became a new home for the tree, and a new place where tapa would be made. The tradition is rooted in both the people and the trees they planted.'
Make Your Own Pattern
Instructions: Each student takes a piece of plain paper (or stronger material if available). They design a tapa-style pattern using black or brown ink. The pattern should use repeated geometric shapes — diamonds, triangles, crosses, lines. Each repetition should be careful and deliberate. Display the patterns. Discuss: real tapa-makers spend hours on similar work. The patience is part of the craft.
Example: In Mrs Sefoʻ's class, students designed their own tapa patterns. Some made bold large designs; others made fine intricate ones. The teacher said: 'Each of you has made one piece. A real ngatu uses many such designs, repeated dozens of times across cloth that is many metres long. The patience is enormous. The result is beautiful. Now you have a tiny taste of what one Pacific woman might do over weeks of work.'
Cloth From Trees
Instructions: In small groups, students discuss: 'Most cloth in your wardrobe is made from cotton, polyester, or wool. What if all your cloth had to come from trees?' Each group lists three things that would change about how they live. Discuss: this is the situation Pacific peoples have actually lived with for thousands of years. Their solution — tapa — is one of the world's great textile achievements.
Example: In one class, students suggested: clothes would last differently, washing would be different, climate considerations would matter more, gifts of cloth would be more special because they took longer to make. The teacher said: 'You have just thought through what life is like in places where cloth comes from trees. Every Pacific island knows this life. The tapa tradition is what they made of it. The cloth is not just a substitute for cotton. It is a different way of being in relationship with the trees and with each other.'
Where to go next
  • Try a lesson on the Hōkūleʻa for another Pacific tradition with a strong story of survival and revival. The same Polynesian voyagers brought the paper mulberry that made tapa possible.
  • Try a lesson on the Marshallese stick chart for another Pacific tradition built by careful women's and men's work over generations.
  • Try a lesson on kente cloth or the Asante gold weight for African textile and craft traditions, to compare with the Pacific.
  • Connect this lesson to art class with a longer project on textile traditions from around the world. Tapa is one of many; each has its own story.
  • Connect this lesson to citizenship class with a longer discussion of women's work and how it is valued. The tapa tradition is one of the clearest cases.
  • Connect this lesson to history class with a longer project on Pacific peoples and their cultures. The Pacific has hundreds of distinct peoples, all with their own traditions.
Key takeaways
  • Tapa cloth is made by beating the inner bark of trees, especially the paper mulberry, into wide thin sheets. It is not woven.
  • Different Pacific islands have their own names and traditions: siapo (Samoa), ngatu (Tonga), kapa (Hawaii), masi (Fiji), hiapo (Niue), and many others. Each is its own tradition.
  • Tapa is mostly made by women, often working together in groups, often with songs that are part of the craft. The work is taught from generation to generation.
  • Tongan ngatu can be over 30 metres long and 4 metres wide, made by groups of women working together for weeks.
  • The tradition was weakened in the 19th century by imported cotton cloth, but it survived strongly in Tonga, Samoa, and Fiji, and has been revived in Hawaii and elsewhere.
  • Tapa is one of the world's great textile traditions, mostly built by women. It has been practised for over 2,000 years and is alive today across the Pacific.
Sources
  • Bark-Cloth in Polynesia — Simon Kooijman (1972) [academic]
  • Made in Oceania: Tapa - Art and Social Landscapes — Anna Schmid (editor) (2009) [academic]
  • Reviving Hawaiian kapa — Smithsonian Magazine (2017) [news]
  • Tapa cloth in Tonga (collection notes) — Te Papa Tongarewa, Museum of New Zealand (2024) [museum]
  • Bishop Museum Pacific Collections — Bishop Museum, Honolulu (2024) [museum]