Kahu huruhuru prestigious feather cloak. Introduced in the second half of the 19th century the kahu huruhuru celebrated the prestigious nature of the Polynesian cloak with the use of high-status bird species such as the kereru kakariki kaka and tui. tably the kahu huruhuru are worked in an upside-down manner with the commencement of the geometric workings starting from the bottom. this suggests they are a development from the orthodox korowai cloak with even earlier roots reaching back into the pre-contact rain cloaks (hieke). The thrum commencement at the bottom edge establishes the whenu (warps) at seven per centimetre. The aho (wefts) are woven in whatu aho rua (double-pair twining) with seven to eight millimetres between rows. The feathers are attached singly to every aho in a complex geometric configuration reminiscent of earlier Hawaiian cloaks. The materials used were. flax fibre and kereru kakariki kaka and tui feathers. Height 95 cm. Width 115 cm.