A Haitian Toile de Jouy in featuring highly detailed engraved-style line art and seamless repeating composition. The print celebrates Haitian women as keepers of culture, memory, resilience, and community. Scenes include women dancing in flowing karabela dresses, women carrying baskets and vessels on their heads, women washing clothes by hand in basins, women braiding hair, sewing garments, preparing food, gathering at market, telling stories beneath trees, and caring for children. Grandmothers, mothers, and daughters appear throughout the composition, emphasizing generational wisdom and maternal bonds. Marie-Jeanne Lamartinière is depicted as a protective figure, standing confidently beside her horse with one hand resting on it. The horse stands behind her. She wears elegant period-inspired clothing that harmonizes with the other women in the print. Her rifle or machete is present but subtle, She appears dignified, grounded, delicately woven throughout the design as guiding ancestral lights. Royal palms, hibiscus flowers, breadfruit leaves, mango branches, tropical foliage, mountain silhouettes, and decorative Haitian ironwork motifs connect the scenes. The Citadelle Laferrière appears subtly in the distance as a symbol of endurance and heritage. The overall mood is feminine, regal, nurturing, ancestral, and timeless. Not to much details on the line work balanced negative space, museum-quality textile design, Ver mais