A Permanent Record of a Living Tradition

How the Registry Works

The Kente Registry is a permanent record of the weavers, families, and cloths that carry one of West Africa’s oldest living traditions. Every entry begins with a person — a master weaver, a community elder, a family custodian, or a member of the public who has come into possession of a cloth and wants its story preserved. This page explains how a submission becomes a registered record, and how anyone, anywhere in the world, can search what we have recorded.

A Plain-Language Overview

From submission to permanent record

There are three stages. A submission is made. A researcher verifies it. The verified record is published to the public registry under a unique Kente Registry number, which stays with that weaver, pattern, or cloth permanently. Searching the registry is free and always will be.

The Registry does not buy, sell, or value cloths. It does not adjudicate ownership. It records — carefully, slowly, and in plain view — so that the knowledge held by master weavers and weaving families is not lost when those who carry it are no longer with us.

Stage Two

Research and Verification

Every submission is reviewed by a researcher before it is added to the public registry. The Registry’s researchers are based both in Ghana — in and around the weaving centres of Bonwire, Agotime-Kpetoe, and Agbozume — and internationally. Their work is to confirm what can be confirmed, to record what cannot, and to make sure no cloth or weaver is published under a claim the evidence does not support.

Behind that single sentence sits a deliberate three-station workflow. A submission first lands in KoboToolbox, where a reviewer reads every field, opens every photograph at full size, and either corrects the record or marks it Not Approved. Only when the entry is clean does it cross into WordPress, where a permanent KR number is atomically reserved and a draft profile is created. Only then, after a final human review, is the record published to the public site. Nothing flows downstream automatically; each handoff is a deliberate human gate.

The full procedure — including the safeguards that make the registry sequence auditable, the handling of edge cases, and the prohibitions that protect the integrity of every certificate — is published as a citable technical note: How the Kente Registry Validates Weavers and Cloths (DOI 10.5281/zenodo.19984280).

For a Master Weaver Profile, verification means corroborating the weaver’s identity, training lineage, and known work with at least one independent source — a community elder, a former apprentice, a trader who handled their cloths, or in some cases an existing institutional record.

For a Weave Pattern, verification means tracing the pattern’s name and meaning to its community of origin, and where possible recording variant names and interpretations from different traditions. Patterns rarely belong to a single voice.

For a Cloth Authentication, verification means assessing the weave itself. The Registry distinguishes between authentic woven Kente — strip-woven on a traditional loom, with the structural fingerprints of hand weaving. Cloths that are not authentically hand-woven are not eligible for registration.

Verification can take days or it can take months. Where a submission cannot be verified — because evidence is missing, because a community cannot be reached, or because the claim itself is contested — the Registry will say so, in writing, in the record. Honest gaps are part of the archive.

A Public Archive

Searching the Registry

The public registry is free to search. There is no account, no paywall, no membership tier. Anyone with an internet connection can look up a weaver by name, search for a pattern by its meaning, or check whether a cloth has been registered. Researchers, journalists, museum curators, students, and members of weaving families can all use the registry on the same terms.

You can search by:

  • Weaver name — full name or partial, in either English or original language spelling.
  • Community or weaving centre — Bonwire, Agotime-Kpetoe, Agbozume, and others.
  • Pattern name — in Ewe, Asante Twi, or English translation.
  • Kente Registry number — direct lookup if you already have one.
  • Cloth provenance — for cloths held in named collections.

Every public record shows what was submitted, what was verified, what could not be verified, and when the record was last updated. The Registry’s standard for what it publishes is set out in the Global Kente Registry Standard, which is itself a public document. You can also verify a specific record directly by Registry ID or weaver name.

Begin

Begin a submission

If you are a weaver, a member of a weaving family, or a custodian of a cloth whose story should be preserved, start here.