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Changing the Osage one thread at a time

Julie O’Keefe, born and raised in Pawhuska, is the president and sole owner of the Grayhorse Group, Inc., a purchasing and Procurement Company based out of Virginia

Julie O’Keefe   held up a pale pink beaded and embroidered shawl at theOsage Tribal Museum June 16. The shawl had turquoise, yellow and light blues in its designs and two women standing nearby nearly gasped.

“My grandmother used to say how elegant the Osage women were so I went to the NMAI [National Museum of the American Indian] and looked at the different patterns,” O’Keefe said. “I started sketching up some ideas for designs of what I liked.” The fringe on the shawl was “shadowed,” something not commonly seen, if ever, on a shawl. The fringe faded from a turquoise, to pale pink to yellow. Her intent was to design shawls of such a high quality that Osage women would buy them and pass them down as heirlooms. Some would say she has more than succeeded. Description: nknown Object“I was named this year by Archie Mason, who took me as his daughter,” O’Keefe said. “He said, ‘My new daughter has done something to change how our women dress and she did it with one thread. I was so proud to see so many new threads around me.’ I was touched by that.”

O’Keefe, who was born and raised in Pawhuska, is the president and sole owner of the Grayhorse Group, Inc., a purchasing and Procurement Company based out of Virginia. The company does business with clientele such as the Four Seasons Hotel in Washington, D.C., the Hempel Hotel in London, and the Ritz Carlton to name a few. It specializes in importing and exporting products from around the world that range from furniture to artwork to bedding to amenities to decorative items. They also have the ability to provide custom products and to direct source from vendors overseas. It’s from access to high quality vendors that she was able to get professional craftsmen and craftswomen to produce the shawls, she said. The shawls are made with semi-precious beads and stones and are beaded by hand. The fringe and colors of the shawls are custom made. To acquire the look of the shadow fringe the fringe had to be hand dipped and the vendor used custom colors. For that effect O’Keefe used a favorite vendor of hers from Mumbai, India.

“I work with some non-profits in D.C. [Washington, D.C.] and I’m always trying to come up with ways to make money,” O’Keefe said. “I’ve actually been reading the articles in the Osage News about the museum’s Osage Ten project and I thought I could help.” O’Keefe partnered with the museum shortly after the Hominy In-Lon-Schka dances to sell the shawls at the museum, with 20 percent of the proceeds going to the Osage Ten project. The shawls range in prices from $475 to $1,560.

“This is my passion,” O’Keefe said. “I just wanted to do something for our people.” To purchase a shawl call the Osage Tribal Museum at 918-287-5441.

 


By

Shannon Shaw Duty


Original Publish Date: 2009-03-12 00:00:00

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Shannon Shaw Duty
Shannon Shaw Dutyhttps://osagenews.org

Title: Editor
Email: sshaw20@gmail.com
Twitter: @dutyshaw
Topic Expertise: Columnist, Culture, Community
Languages spoken: English, Osage (intermediate), Spanish (beginner)

Shannon Shaw Duty, Osage from the Grayhorse District, is the editor of the award-winning Osage News, the official independent media of the Osage Nation. She is a graduate of the University of Oklahoma with a bachelor’s degree in Journalism and a master’s degree in Legal Studies with an emphasis in Indigenous Peoples Law. She currently sits on the Freedom of Information Committee for the Society of Professional Journalists. She has served as a board member for LION Publishers, as Vice President for the Pawhuska Public Schools Board of Education, on the Board of Directors for the Native American Journalists Association (now Indigenous Journalists Association) and served as a board member and Chairwoman for the Pawhuska Johnson O’Malley Parent Committee. She is a Chips Quinn Scholar, a former instructor for the Freedom Forum’s Native American Journalism Career Conference and the Freedom Forum’s American Indian Journalism Institute. She is a former reporter for The Santa Fe New Mexican. She is a 2012 recipient of the Native American 40 Under 40 from the National Center for American Indian Enterprise Development. In 2014 she helped lead the Osage News to receive NAJA's Elias Boudinot Free Press Award. The Osage News won Best Newspaper from the SPJ-Oklahoma Chapter in their division 2018-2022. Her award-winning work has been published in Indian Country Today, The Washington Post, the Center for Public Integrity, NPR, the Associated Press, Tulsa World and others. She currently resides in Pawhuska, Okla., with her husband and together they share six children, two dogs and two cats.

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