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Articles: Kashan rugs
14 search results for Kashan rugs. Follow link to more information on publishers web site.
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PERSIAN RUG SPOTLIGHT: SAROUK TYPE PERSIAN RUGS
...heir own presence in Arak (Ziegler and Company was the first and most important) and were producing rugs with Western tastes in mind. Ferahans One of the earliest of the new breed of Arak District Per......eed, their lack of perfection is a characteristic by which they may be identified. Weavers in Kashan who were making rugs at the same time with similar designs and of similar fineness usually produced more skillfully woven rugs, though perhaps not as charming. As they have become scarce, Ferahan Sar... - http://www.internetrugs.com/learn/oriental-rugs-sarouk.html 28/04/2006 - Category: Persian - More from this publisher
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SILK RUG HISTORY ... The History of Silk Rugs Silk has been an uncommonly used material for rugs for centuries. There are exisiting examples of spectacular silk rugs from the 16th century - The Vienna Hunting Carpet avai......601, Sigismund III (Sigismund Vasa), King of Poland, sent the Armenian merchant Muratovitz to Kashan to supervise the work on rugs ordered there. Rugs of this type were probably intended for Europe from the very first; this circumstance, the widespread use of cotton for warp and weft, the low number... - http://www.orientalrugs.com/Features/silkhist.htm 29/01/2005 - Category: Basics - More from this publisher
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CAIRENE CARPETS (MAMLUK/OTTOMAN) ...Renaissance of Islam: Art of the Mamluks . Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington. (Textiles and Rugs, pp. 223-248). See also review by Lois Ibsen al-Faruqi in The Muslim World , vol. LXXIII, no. 3...... Museum of Art, New York. See also review (Beattie 1974). Ellis, Charles Grant 1962Gifts from Kashan to Cairo, Textile Museum Journal vol. 1, no. 1, pp. 33-46. Washington. 1967Mysteries of the Misplaced Mamluks, Textile Museum Journal vol. 2, no. 2, December, pp. 3-20. Washington. 1974Is the Mamluk ... - http://www.lib.umich.edu/area/Near.East/Textiles/RC15A.html 09/01/2005 - Category: Literature - More from this publisher
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HANDMADE PERSIAN RUGS, CARPETS DIRECTLY FROM PERSIAN WEAVERS
... Persian Carpets, Rugs Hamadan, Nain, Kashmar, Kashan, Golpayegan, Gabbeh, Bakhtiari, Kerman, Tabriz Persian rugs have long been valued around the world, and remain the most popular area rugs of all. These rugs have always been sturdy and long-lived as t... - http://www.area-rug-store.com/persiancarpets.shtml 31/10/2004 - Category: Persian - More from this publisher
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5 STAR GUIDE TO ORIENTAL RUG BOOKS P ...rite me and I may annotate this list with your comments. Pacific Asia Museum. Woven Jewels, Tibetan Rugs from Southern California Collections. Pasadena: 1992. Not Yet Rated. Tibetan Rugs Page, J. &......, Harry N. Abrahms, Inc. Publishers, 1992).Page 135 Plate 149 as compared to what we see from Kashan and Yazd at the time Pal's comments do not appear to hold up. I might also add that the wealth of the Mughal elite was so vast as to make ludicrous the notion that young princes ran around in hand me... - http://www.spongobongo.com/starbibp.htm 01/10/2004 - Category: Literature - More from this publisher
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ORIENTAL RUG RESTORATION: TO RESTORE OR NOT ... question! Have you decided, dear reader? I suspect you have. Everybody who comes into contact with rugs and carpets sooner or later will have to make up his or her mind on this question. Opinion on r......eterioration respects the integrity of the weaving. A specialist at work on a densely knotted Kashan carpet, Izmer It seems that Persian mosques were not so extensively ransacked as their Turkish counterparts in the 19th and 20th century, so we rarely find Persian fragments from Isfahan, Kerman, or ... - http://www.rugreview.com/6restore.htm 21/09/2004 - Category: Basics - More from this publisher
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NAVAB BROTHERS - GAZETTE: "THE INFLUENCE OF HERAT" ... serrated leaf and fan-shaped palmett motifs. These two not only played a major role in identifying rugs being woven in Herat during Timurid rule, but also began to appear more and more in other compe...... rather than Isphahan. In any event, these Isphahans and their contemporaries from Tabriz and Kashan all show influence from Herat. Not long after, these same motifs reached into the remote tribal regions such as Anatolia, Turkmenstans and the Caucasus. One of the great examples of weaving to come o... - http://orientalrugcompany.com/gaz3.html 21/09/2004 - Category: Miscellaneous - More from this publisher
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ORIENTAL RUGS AND WEAVING IN CHINA
... Weaving in China... China has woven hand-knotted rugs for centuries. There are reports of rugs being woven in north-central China, in the area around Ningxia, as early as 1696. By the 1860's there we......e weave 9' x 12' CHINESE Carved rug in Art Deco design. Wool on cotton, 90 line weave 6' x 9' KASHAN A Sino-Persian rug. Wool on cotton, 160 line weave 8' x 10' Weaving in China.... Boys hand-weaving broadloom carpet in Tianjin, China in 1928. Carving matching Art Deco carpets in Tianjin, China in 1... - http://www.jacobsenrugs.com/china.htm 14/09/2004 - Category: Chinese - More from this publisher
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ORIENTAL RUGS: HOW TO COUNT KNOTS
...red elements, the rug has offset warps and each element should be counted as one knot. Many country rugs from Turkey, Afghanistan, and Iran show both knot elements on the back of the rug, as do Bokhar...... across the warp and weft counted in the normal way. For example, a "16/18" quality Kashan has 16 X 18 weave, or about 288 knots per sq. in. Note that these rugs have strongly offset warps, so you will only see one element of the knot on the back of the rug. So-called "double" Bo... - http://www.jacobsenrugs.com/countknots.htm 14/09/2004 - Category: Basics - More from this publisher
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ORIENTAL RUGS AND RUG WEAVING IN INDIA
... of Delhi. Both districts produce an incredible assortment of low quality to very good quality wool rugs in a variety of sizes and in many Persian patterns (we buy many rugs in the Varanasi-district w......' x 10' TABRIZ All-over "animal" design. Wool on cotton, 130 knots/sq. in. 9' x 12' KASHAN All-over "Shah Abbas" design. Wool on cotton, 91 knots/sq. in. 5' x 8' KASHAN Most typical medallion design. Wool on cotton, 210 knots/sq. in. 6' x 9' "Mir" SARABEND With all-over... - http://www.jacobsenrugs.com/india.htm 14/09/2004 - Category: Miscellaneous - More from this publisher
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Result pages for Kashan rugs : 1 2
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