Black and white photograph of Bob Younger after being captured outside Madelia, September 1876.  Photographed by Jacoby’s Art Gallery.

Bob Younger after being captured

Bob Younger after being captured outside Madelia, September 1876. Photographed by Jacoby’s Art Gallery.

photograph of a lace doily featuring a tipi motif

Bobbin lace doily with tipi motif

Tape lace linen doily; square with tape work in a tipi motif at center, joined by braids decorated with picots. Doily includes woven spider fillings and tape lace border.

Bobbin lace pillow with bobbins and paper patterns

Bobbin lace pillow with bobbins and paper patterns

Bobbin lace making pillow and paper patterns. Wood base padded with natural fiber stuffing and coved with tan cotton fabric. Paper lace pattern pinned to pillow with metal pins with lace in progress. Ten wood bobbins hang from work, wound with linen thread.

Bobbin-lace table mat

Bobbin-lace table mat

Bobbin-lace table mat made with linen thread, ca. 1890s–1910s.

Black and white photograph of Bobby McFerrin & SPCO at Groveland Park Elementary School in St. Paul, 1995.

Bobby McFerrin & SPCO at Groveland Park Elementary School

Bobby McFerrin & SPCO at Groveland Park Elementary School in St. Paul, 1995.

Bodice

Bodice

Chiffon bodice with lace made by Caroline Mundahl, 1915–1917

Black and white photograph of a Bohemian boy, Virginia, 1914.

Bohemian boy in Virginia

Bohemian boy, Virginia, 1914.

Bois Forte Ojibwe birch-bark sap bucket

Bois Forte Ojibwe birch-bark sap bucket

Birch-bark bucket used to collect sap from maple trees. Created by citizens of the Bois Forte Band of Chippewa, ca. 1880. The Bois Forte as well as the Grand Portage Chippewa (Ojibwe) reserve the right to hunt, fish, collect sap for maple sugar, and harvest wild rice in their traditional homelands inside the Superior National Forest.

Boltz, an ambassador wolf

Boltz, an ambassador wolf

Ambassador wolf Boltz at the International Wolf Center in Ely, 2019.

Bone trade beads

Bone trade beads

Hair-pipe bone beads used in the fur trade no earlier than 1700 and no later than 1837.

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