Since the 1990s, Guna women have increasingly used pre-printed commercial fabrics (often from China or the US) as their base layer. The specifically tracks errors in these printed materials.
Ensuring the notes on the page match the composer's original intent. Synchronize Rehearsal Numbers: Mola Errata List
Giving the sunfish a cute, upturned, parrot-like beak or a perpetual, friendly smile. Why It Happens: The sunfish’s mouth is small and terminal (at the front of the head), but when preserved specimens dry out, the jaw contracts and curls upward, creating a "grin." The Correction: The Mola mola does not smile. Its mouth is a permanent, small, oval-shaped hole. In live specimens, the mouth appears downturned or strictly neutral. The Errata List is famously brutal on this point: "A smiling sunfish is a dead sunfish. Draw the grim reality." Since the 1990s, Guna women have increasingly used