Indigenous Season Rugs Set of 6 — Aboriginal Six Seasons Classroom Rug Collection
Artwork by Indigenous artist Kiz Costelloe
Price excludes GST
In Stock. Ships next business day.
Aboriginal Artist
Proudly designed in Australia by Aboriginal artist Kiz Costelloe, a Mandandanji and Noonuccal woman from Rockhampton, Queensland. Each artwork was created to share the stories of Country, then ethically reproduced on a durable plush pile rug, ready for an Australian early learning environment.
Designed by Aboriginal artist Kiz Costelloe.
Features
Authentic Aboriginal artwork by Kiz Costelloe, supplied with a certificate of authenticity for EYLF accreditation. Soft plush pile, non-slip backing and overlocked edges built for busy classroom traffic. Six 1m rounds that flex from yarning circle to quiet corner, supporting Outcomes 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5.
• Authentic Aboriginal artwork by Kiz Costelloe, a proud Mandandanji and Noonuccal woman, with certificate of authenticity included.
• Embeds Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander perspectives into daily practice, supporting NQF Quality Area 6 cultural responsiveness.
• Six rugs for six Noongar seasons — a place-based provocation for learning about Country, weather and seasonal change.
• Soft, durable plush pile with non-slip backing — fit for purpose for active, calming and group learning spaces.
• Aligned to EYLF Outcomes 1 to 5 — identity, connection to world, wellbeing, confident learners and effective communicators.
Size
Set SKU: RUG017-6
Each rug: 1m diameter, round
Weight: approx. 2kg per rug (12kg set total)
Pile: soft plush nylon with non-slip backing
Edges: heavy-duty overlocked
Age: suitable for all early years and primary settings
Set includes 6 rugs — one per Noongar season:
• Birak (First Summer) — SKU RUG017-BIR
• Bunuru (Second Summer) — SKU RUG017-BUN
• Djeran (Autumn) — SKU RUG017-DJE
• Makuru (Winter) — SKU RUG017-MAK
• Djilba (First Spring) — SKU RUG017-DJI
• Kambarang (Second Spring) — SKU RUG017-KAM
Shipping
This Rug is in stock and ships next business day.
A yarning space where every season tells a story.
Imagine your morning meeting on Country. Six vibrant rugs, six stories, one welcoming, culturally safe space that affirms identity, belonging and connection to land. Children settle, listen and yarn — and you tick off cultural responsiveness in the most beautiful, tangible way.
Gather your little learners onto a yarning space that honours the longest surviving Indigenous culture in the world. This set of six round rugs, designed by proud Mandandanji and Noonuccal artist Kiz Costelloe, brings the Noongar six seasons — Birak, Bunuru, Djeran, Makuru, Djilba and Kambarang — into your learning environment. Each rug is a place-based provocation for sustained shared thinking, supporting EYLF Outcome 2 and NQF Quality Area 3 by embedding Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander perspectives into every-day practice. Certificate of authenticity included.
Story behind the artworks.
Birak — the red colours and fire flames I've used in this design represent the weather starting to warm up, which indicates the time of year that the Noongar people start burning country.
Bunuru — I have incorporated the white flowers within this design to represent the white flowers that are in full bloom at this time of year. The orange colours surrounding the flowers depict the hottest time of the year.
Djeran — I have used the colour green, as this is the colour that represents this time of year. The weather becomes a bit more cool and damp, ready for the rainy winter months coming.
Makuru — the leaves I've illustrated in correlation with the cool blue tones symbolise the wind change and the coming of the rain which fill the waterways with life.
Djilba — this design and the pink colours were inspired by the flowers that are in full bloom at this time of year. The rich and bright colours start to fill the land and make the warmer weather more evident.
Kambarang — I chose this particular shape in this piece as this season brings out the snakes. The yellow colours represent the yellow flowers that begin to blossom.