available or because of has been sold for their urgent
needs. Replica of pua kumbu has the same color
patterns as the original fabric, as well as its symbolic
meaning and function. Some pua kumbu only used
during certain events and are not traded with the aim
that their next generation will have original fabric
that can be replicated later. Through pua kumbu, the
Iban people are caring for and preserving their
weaving tradition that has been passed down from
generation to generation.
According to the pre-history of the Megalithic
era, before Dongson culture came to this
archipelago, some artifacts of illustrated stones were
found, and commonly it used three colors, black, red
and white, which considered having a cosmological
meaning. White is a color that is found in almost
every tribe of Indonesia as a symbol of the Dunia
Atas (spiritual color), black is the color of the land
(human earth), and red is the earth of humans as well
as its position as a category of women because white
is the category of men for the Dunia Bawah
(Sumardjo, 2001). The possibility of the old color
layout still hasa connection with the typical color
system of Iban weaving, namely red, black and
white along when it traced from the similarity of the
prehistoric motives that contained in Iban woven
fabrics.
Even so, there are different versions as our
informant said at the Betang Enkadan in Lanjak
which they say that weavers in the past did not use
many colors, limited to only red (brownish red),
black, blue and white. This color selection was due
to limited knowledge of color in possibility. The
informant from the Betang Ngaung Keruh had a
different opinion that the original colors of the Iban
weaving were white, black and red. According to an
informant in Sungai Panjang, the original colors of
Iban are red, yellow, black and white. However, the
informants at Tekalong said that the original Iban
color was red, black and white. The locals' opinion
on the color composition of Iban is not so different
from the information found in Gillow's book entitled
Traditional Indonesian Textiles (1992) which
describes that the traditional colors of Iban weaving
are brownish-red, blue-black and yellow without
further elaborating on the symbolism that each color
carries.
The color of the Iban woven fabric its specific
name in Iban language; black is celum, white is
burak, red is mansau, green is gadung, purple is
belo-belo. For blue and yellow, the Iban call it biru
and kuning the same as its’ Indonesian terms. The
locals also named the colors based on its intensity,
such as; dark red is called mansau tuai, light green is
gadung muda, orange is kuning tuai, reddish purple
is mansau tuai, and turquoise is called biru tuai. For
lighter color the Ibans use the term curak which
means grey, for example, curak mansau, curak
celum and so on.
In choosing the color of woven fabric for the
gawai, the Iban people wear bright colors such as
red and blue in connection with the implementation
of the method he held after receiving a sign of the
descent of the heavenly people. There are no
restrictions on the use of colors, such as in a
Christian ceremony, harvesting celebration, as well
as a baby birth ceremony. But specifically, for the
wedding ceremony, the Ibans wear clothes in bright
colors. Weavers avoid the use of black as a
dominant color because it is believed that it will
make their eyes blind. Unless there is a grieving
ceremony for the deceased Iban, then the sign of
condolence is utilized in the form of a rattan-made
rope that is dyed black then tied to the body.
The ban on using black colorcan be seen in a
ceremony called Gawai Sanawari. This ceremony is
held if there is an Iban who often get nightmares,
then in the next dream, there is a sign that the person
must have gawai. If the signis not obeyed, then the
person will go crazy or die. For the ceremony, the
person who gets the nightmare must offer a pig. In
this ceremony, the pedara is placed on a high
bamboo pole, then the yellow rice made of the
mixture of limestone and lime is thrown away so
that the nightmare becomes tasteless. After that, the
pig is killed and cooked, and to accompany it the
locals will drink tuak. Ibans find out the meaning of
the dream by using gawai the heart of a slaughtered
pig. If the shape of the heart is good or if there is no
injury, the related person will not go crazy or die.
On the other hand, if its liver looks like a wound, it
means a bad sign, then they should make gawai
again in the same manner. Pork meat that has been
cooked is then eaten together with the other
residents of a betang house. When the Iban will kill
the pig, a special weaving called Pua Atap Babi is
issued. This weave is brown-colored with a hint of
black and yellow with geometric plant motifs and is
used for protecting pigs when cut for offerings.
The symbolic meaning of the colors applied to
the Iban woven fabric was seen with a different
perspective by different weavers, as quoted from our
informant at the Betang Ngaung Keruh that people
in the past did not tell them much about the colors of
the woven fabric that they had made. One of the
examples is the red color for sungkit cloth does not
have a specific rule, it is only to extend that red is a
symbol of the courage of the Iban people. While
other weavers said that they have some restrictions
on color, based on messages from their parents
thatthey should not make woven fabric in a black