Ibanag design patterns documented by the Spaniards were zigzags or lassigassing (gitigiteting in Itawit), stripes vurivuri’ (inallad in Itawit), and obscure symbols like the tallafuki, an icon based on the female genitalia. Anthropomorphic designs, or inatolayan, and octopus-sucker patterns or kinugita, were applied on earrings and gold jewelry.
Perhaps the most notable application of these patterns could have been seen in the Ibanag’s traditional textiles, if their weaving industry was still alive today. Specifically, Ibanag textile patterns included the nammata-mata (minata in Itawit), a diamond or eye pattern that is also common in the Ibanag’s neighboring ethnic groups like the Itawit and the Cordillera groups. Richly designed textiles, were known as kinumi’ in Ibanag, and were used as status symbols, particularly the striped gaddun overskirts of noble women.
Textile designs were skillfully woven through the alternating combinations of cotton threads, which were dyed using natural plant-based pigments such as red or labba, yellow or kunig, and black or indigo or gunab, or were left in their natural white color.
Another application of patterns derived from nature was tattooing, or was known as bato’ in Ibanag (batak in Itawit). Ibanag tattoos, which were exclusively for warriors, were applied on the hands using a fern pattern or appaku, the only tattoo design yielded by records so far.
Other crafts where patterns could have been incorporated were vine-weaving for baskets, smithing, and even architecture, where the Ibanags’ skill could have turned geometrical concepts– circles or sibbukal, triangles or siggulud, quadrilaterals or mabbangan, midpoints or aba’, angles or tungu into complex masterpieces through the expert integration of indigenous metric methods.
Literature, per se, appears to be non-existent among the ancient Ibanag though they possess a term for writing or tura. Instead, storytelling was performed, and tales were passed down orally, often in chanted forms or unini. A pakkaw, a tale of warriors’ exploits was performed after their successful homecoming, while a bannan, recounts the life of a deceased as tribute.
Similarly, the Itawit once widely practiced the dallogay, a chanting tradition that gave tribute to a person– the same chanting form that related the story of the epic heroes of Cagayan Valley, Biuag and Malana.
The influence of the Spaniards made the Ibanag and Itawit develop colonial-period story-telling traditions. This could be in chanted poetry such as the verso, or simple pastime narratives or folktales or bida. While simultaneously, the pre-colonial term unini eventually transformed into the modern unoni, which could either mean poem, proverb, or lullaby.