Robert MacLehose & Co., Ltd.The Main Library, University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus, Barbados is responsible for making this digital resource available.2024-05-292024-05-29PC 708https://hdl.handle.net/2139/56765Landscape; Black & white; 3 ½” x 5 ½”Card reads in full ; Tapia plastering; a cheap method of making walls with clay and dry grass, mostly used by Indians; Trinidad, B.W.I. This is an image of man wearing a broad rim hat in the process of plastering the wall of the hut (ajoupa) using his hands. These huts were used first by Amerindians, then indentured East Indian labourers in colonial times. This is a divided back postcard. Back of the postcard; A €4 (Handwritten in pencil). Copyright: Ace Studio, Trinidad (15). Printed in Scotland by Robert Maclehose & Co., Ltd.enThis item is presented courtesy of the Main Library, the University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus, Barbados for research and educational purposes. Prior permission is required from the Main Library for any commercial use.HutsConstructionClayBuilding materialsAjoupaTapia PlasteringImage