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Wikipedia

Carpet

A carpet is a textile floor covering typically consisting of an upper layer of pile attached to a backing. The pile was traditionally made from wool, but since the 20th century synthetic fibers such as polypropylene, nylon, or polyester have often been used, as these fibers are less expensive than wool. The pile usually consists of twisted tufts that are typically heat-treated to maintain their structure. The term carpet is often used in a similar context to the term rug, but rugs are typically considered to be smaller than a room and not attached to the floor.[1]

One of the Ardabil Carpets
A small rug
Turkish woolen carpet

Carpets are used for a variety of purposes, which includes insulating a person's feet from a cold tile or concrete floor, making a room more comfortable as a place to sit on the floor (e.g., when playing with children or as a prayer rug), reducing sound from walking (particularly in apartment buildings), and adding decoration or color to a room. Carpets can be made in any color by using differently dyed fibers. Carpets can have many different types of patterns and motifs used to decorate the surface. Carpets are used in industrial and commercial establishments such as retail stores and hotels and in private homes. Today, a huge range of carpets and rugs are available at many price and quality levels, ranging from inexpensive, synthetic carpets that are mass-produced in factories and used in commercial buildings to costly hand-knotted wool rugs that are used in private residences.

Carpets can be produced on a loom quite similarly to woven fabric, made using needle felts, knotted by hand (in oriental rugs), made with their pile injected into a backing material (called tufting), flatwoven, made by hooking wool or cotton through the meshes of a sturdy fabric, or embroidered. Carpet is commonly made in widths of 12 feet (3.7 m) and 15 feet (4.6 m) in the US and 4 m (13 ft) and 5 m (16 ft) in Europe. Since the 19th and 20th century, where necessary for wall-to-wall carpet, different widths of carpet can be seamed together with a seaming iron and seam tape (formerly it was sewn together) and fixed to a floor over a cushioned underlay (pad) using nails, tack strips (known in the UK as gripper rods), adhesives, or occasionally decorative metal stair rods. Wall-to-wall carpet is distinguished from rugs or mats, which are loose-laid floor coverings, as wall-to-wall carpet is fixed to the floor and covers a much larger area.

Etymology and usage edit

 
A carpet seller in Jaipur, India

The term carpet comes from Latin carpita,[2] Old French carpite.[2] One derivation of the term states that the French term came from the Old Italian carpita, from the verb carpire meaning 'to pluck'.[3][4] The Online Etymology Dictionary states that the term carpet was first used in English in the late 13th century, with the meaning 'coarse cloth', and by the mid-14th century, "tablecloth, [or] bedspread".[5] The word comes from Old French carpite 'heavy decorated cloth, carpet', from Medieval Latin or Old Italian carpita 'thick woolen cloth', which may derive from Latin carpere 'to card, pluck'.[5] The meaning of the term carpet shifted in the 15th century to refer to floor coverings.[5]

The terms carpet and rug are often used interchangeably. A carpet is sometimes defined as stretching from wall to wall.[6] Another definition treats rugs as of lower quality or of smaller size, with carpets quite often having finished ends. A third common definition is that a carpet is permanently fixed in place while a rug is simply laid out on the floor. Historically, the term carpet was also applied to table and wall coverings, as carpets were not commonly used on the floor in European interiors until the 15th century.

The term rug was first used in English in the 1550s, with the meaning 'coarse fabric'. The term is of Scandinavian origin, comparable to Norwegian rugga 'coarse coverlet', from Old Norse rogg 'shaggy tuft', from Proto-Germanic *rawwa-.[7] The meaning of rug "evolved to 'coverlet, wrap' (1590s), then 'mat for the floor' (1808)".[7]

Types edit

 
Modern carpet illustrating a camel caravan on the Silk Road

Woven edit

The carpet is produced on a loom quite similar to woven fabric. The pile can be plush or Berber. Plush carpet is a cut pile and Berber carpet is a loop pile. There are new styles of carpet combining the two styles called cut and loop carpeting. Normally many colored yarns are used and this process is capable of producing intricate patterns from predetermined designs (although some limitations apply to certain weaving methods with regard to accuracy of pattern within the carpet). These carpets are usually the most expensive due to the relatively slow speed of the manufacturing process. These are very famous in Turkey, Iran, India, Pakistan, and Arabia.

Needle felt edit

 
A toranj medallion, a common design in Persian carpets

Needle felt carpets are more technologically advanced. These carpets are produced by intermingling and felting individual synthetic fibers using barbed and forked needles forming an extremely durable carpet. These carpets are normally found in commercial settings where there is frequent traffic, such as hotels and restaurants.

Knotted edit

 
A traditional rug being woven on a carpet loom

On a knotted pile carpet (formally, a "supplementary weft cut-loop pile" carpet), the structural weft threads alternate with a supplementary weft that rises at right angles to the surface of the weave. This supplementary weft is attached to the warp by one of three knot types (see below), such as shag carpet which was popular in the 1970s, to form the pile or nap of the carpet. Knotting by hand is most prevalent in oriental rugs and carpets. Kashmir carpets are also hand-knotted. Pile carpets, like flat carpets, can be woven on a loom. Both vertical and horizontal looms have been used in the production of European and oriental carpets. The warp threads are set up on the frame of the loom before weaving begins. A number of weavers may work together on the same carpet. A row of knots is completed and cut. The knots are secured with (usually one to four) rows of weft. The warp in woven carpet is usually cotton and the weft is jute.[citation needed]

There are several styles of knotting, but the two main types of knot are the symmetrical (also called Turkish or Ghiordes) and asymmetrical (also called Persian or Senna). Contemporary centres of knotted carpet production are: Lahore and Peshawar (Pakistan), Kashmir (India), Mirzapur and Bhadohi (India),[8]Tabriz (Iran), Afghanistan, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Turkey, Northern Africa, Nepal, Spain, Turkmenistan, and Tibet. The importance of carpets in the culture of Turkmenistan is such that the national flag features a vertical red stripe near the hoist side, containing five carpet guls (designs used in producing rugs). Kashmir and bhadohi is known for handknotted carpets of silk or wool.

Tufted edit

 
Swatches of tufted carpet
 
Drying carpets in a village workshop at the Ourika Valley, Morocco

These are carpets that have their pile injected with the help of tufting gun into a backing material, which is itself then bonded to a secondary backing made of a woven hessian weave or a man made alternative to provide stability. The pile is often sheared in order to achieve different textures. This is the most common method of manufacturing of domestic carpets for floor covering purposes in the world.

Others edit

A flatweave carpet is created by interlocking warp (vertical) and weft (horizontal) threads. Types of oriental flatwoven carpet include kilim, soumak, plain weave, and tapestry weave. Types of European flatwoven carpets include Venetian, Dutch, damask, list, haircloth, and ingrain (aka double cloth, two-ply, triple cloth, or three-ply).

A hooked rug is a simple type of rug handmade by pulling strips of cloth such as wool or cotton through the meshes of a sturdy fabric such as burlap. This type of rug is now generally made as a handicraft. The process of creating a hooked rug is called Rug hooking.[9]

Unlike woven carpets, embroidery carpets' are not formed on a loom. Their pattern is established by the application of stitches to a cloth (often linen) base. The tent stitch and the cross stitch are two of the most common. Embroidered carpets were traditionally made by royal and aristocratic women in the home, but there has been some commercial manufacture since steel needles were introduced (earlier needles were made of bone) and linen weaving improved in the 16th century. Mary, Queen of Scots, is known to have been an avid embroiderer. 16th century designs usually involve scrolling vines and regional flowers (for example, the Bradford carpet). They often incorporate animal heraldry and the coat of arms of the maker. Production continued through the 19th century. Victorian embroidered carpet compositions include highly illusionistic, 3-dimensional flowers. Patterns for tiled carpets made of a number of squares, called Berlin wool work, were introduced in Germany in 1804, and became extremely popular in England in the 1830s. Embroidered carpets can also include other features such as a pattern of shapes, or they can even tell a story.

Fibres and yarns edit

 
A Moldovan stamp featuring a carpet

Carpet can be formulated from many single or blended natural and synthetic fibres. Fibres are chosen for durability, appearance, ease of manufacture, and cost. In terms of scale of production, the dominant yarn constructions are polyamides (nylons) and polypropylene with an estimated 90% of the commercial market.[10]

Nylon edit

Since the 20th century, nylon is one of the most common materials for the construction of carpets. Both nylon 6 and nylon 6-6 are used. Nylon can be dyed topically or dyed in a molten state (solution dying). Nylon can be printed easily and has excellent wear characteristics. Due to nylon's excellent wear-resistance, it is widely used in industrial and commercial carpeting. In carpets, nylon tends to stain easily due to the presence of dye sites. These dye sites need to be filled in order to give nylon carpet any type of stain resistance. As nylon is petroleum-based it varies in price with the price of oil.

Polypropylene edit

Polypropylene, a polyolefin stiffer than the cheaper polyethylene, is used to produce carpet yarns because it is still less expensive than the other materials used for carpets. It is difficult to dye and does not wear as well as wool or nylon. Polypropylene, sometimes referred to simply as "olefin", is commonly used to construct berber carpets. Large looped olefin berber carpets are usually only suited for light domestic use and tend to mat down quickly. Berber carpets with smaller loops tend to be more resilient and retain their new appearance longer than large looped berber styles. Commercial grade level-loop carpets have very small loops, and commercial grade cut-pile styles can be well constructed. When made with polypropylene, commercial grade styles wear very well, making them very suitable for areas with heavy foot traffic such as offices. Polypropylene carpets are known to have good stain resistance, but not against oil-based agents. If a stain does set, it can be difficult to clean. Commercial grade carpets can be glued directly to the floor or installed over a 1/4" thick, 8-pound density padding. Outdoor grass carpets are usually made from polypropylene.

Wool and wool-blends edit

 
A wool carpet

Wool has excellent durability, can be dyed easily and is fairly abundant. When blended with synthetic fibres such as nylon the durability of wool is increased. Blended wool yarns are extensively used in production of modern carpet, with the most common blend being 80% wool to 20% synthetic fibre, giving rise to the term "80/20". Wool is relatively expensive and consequently, it only comprises a small portion of the market.

Polyester edit

The polyester known as "PET" (polyethylene terephthalate) is used in carpet manufacturing in both spun and filament constructions. After the price of raw materials for many types of carpet rose in the early 2000s, polyester became more competitive. Polyester has good physical properties and is inherently stain-resistant because it is hydrophobic, however oil based stains can pose a problem for this type of material and it can be prone to soiling. Similar to nylon, colour can be added after production or it can be infused in a molten state (solution dyeing). Polyester has the disadvantage that it tends to crush or mat down easily. It is typically used in mid- to low-priced carpeting.

Another polyester, "PTT" (Polytrimethylene terephthalate), also called Sorona or 3GT (Dupont) or Corterra (Shell), is a variant of PET. Lurgi Zimmer PTT was first patented in 1941, but it was not produced until the 1990s, when Shell Chemicals developed the low-cost method of producing high-quality 1,3 propanediol (PDO), the starting raw material for PTT Corterra Polymers. DuPont subsequently commercialized a biological process for making 1,3-propanediol from corn syrup, imparting significant renewable content on the corresponding Sorona polyester carpet fibers.[11] These carpet fibers have resiliency comparable to nylon.[12]

Acrylic edit

Acrylic is a synthetic material first created by the Dupont Corporation in 1941 but has gone through various changes since it was first introduced. In the past, acrylic carpet used to fuzz or "pill" easily. This happened when the fibres degraded over time and short strands broke away with contact or friction. Over the years, new types of acrylics have been developed to alleviate some of these problems, although the issues have not been completely removed. Acrylic is fairly difficult to dye but is colourfast, washable, and has the feel and appearance of wool, making it a good rug fabric.

History edit

 
The Pazyryk Carpet, the oldest surviving carpet in the world (Armenia or Persia, 5th century BC)
 
The Czartoryski carpet with coat of arms of the Polish Myszkowski family,[13] made with a cotton warp, a silk weft and pile, and metal wrapped thread (Iran, 17th century)

The knotted pile carpet probably originated in the Caspian Sea area (Northern Iran) [14] or the Armenian Highland.[15] Although there is evidence of goats and sheep being sheared for wool and hair which was spun and woven as far back at the 7th millennium, the earliest surviving pile carpet is the "Pazyryk carpet", which dates from the 5th-4th century BC. It was excavated by Sergei Ivanovich Rudenko in 1949 from a Pazyryk burial mound in the Altai Mountains in Siberia. This richly coloured carpet is 200 x 183 cm (6'6" x 6'0") and framed by a border of griffins.[16]

Although claimed by many cultures, this square tufted carpet, almost perfectly intact, is considered by many experts to be of Caucasian, specifically Armenian, origin. The rug is woven using the Armenian double knot, and the red filaments' color was made from Armenian cochineal.[17][18] The eminent authority of ancient carpets, Ulrich Schurmann, says of it, "From all the evidence available I am convinced that the Pazyryk rug was a funeral accessory and most likely a masterpiece of Armenian workmanship".[19] Gantzhorn concurs with this thesis. At the ruins of Persepolis in Iran where various nations are depicted as bearing tribute, the horse design from the Pazyryk carpet is the same as the relief depicting part of the Armenian delegation.[15] The historian Herodotus writing in the 5th century BC also informs us that the inhabitants of the Caucasus wove beautiful rugs with brilliant colors which would never fade.[20]

Afghanistan edit

There has recently been a surge in demand for Afghan carpets, although many Afghan carpet manufacturers market their products under the name of a different country.[21] The carpets are made in Afghanistan, as well as by Afghan refugees who reside in Pakistan and Iran. Famous Afghan rugs include the Shindand or Adraskan (named after local Afghan villages), woven in the Herat area in western Afghanistan.

Afghan carpets are commonly known as Afghan rugs. Afghan carpets are a unique and well recognized handmade material design that originates from Afghanistan. They often exhibit intricate detailing, mainly using traditional tribal designs originating from the Turkmen, Kazakh, Baloch, and Uzbeks. The hand-made rugs come in many patterns and colors, yet the traditional and most common example of Afghan carpet is the octagon-shaped elephant-foot (Bukhara). The rugs with this print are most commonly red in color. Many dyes, such as vegetable dyes, are used to impart rich color.

Armenia edit

Various rug fragments have been excavated in Armenia dating back to the 7th century BC or earlier. The oldest, single, surviving knotted carpet in existence is the Pazyryk carpet, excavated from a frozen tomb in Siberia, dated from the 5th to the 3rd century BC, now in the Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg. This square tufted carpet, almost perfectly intact, is considered by many experts to be of Caucasian, specifically Armenian, origin. The eminent authority of ancient carpets, Ulrich Schurmann, says of it, "From all the evidence available I am convinced that the Pazyryk rug was a funeral accessory and most likely a masterpiece of Armenian workmanship".[22] Gantzhorn concurs with this thesis. At the ruins of Persepolis in Iran where various nations are depicted as bearing tribute, the horse design from the Pazyryk carpet is the same as the relief depicting part of the Armenian delegation. Armenian carpets were renowned by foreigners who travelled to Artsakh; the Arab geographer and historian Al-Masudi noted that, among other works of art, he had never seen such carpets elsewhere in his life.[23]

Art historian Hravard Hakobyan notes that "Artsakh carpets occupy a special place in the history of Armenian carpet-making."[24] Common themes and patterns found on Armenian carpets were the depiction of dragons and eagles. They were diverse in style, rich in colour and ornamental motifs, and were even separated in categories depending on what sort of animals were depicted on them, such as artsvagorgs (eagle-carpets), vishapagorgs (dragon-carpets) and otsagorgs (serpent-carpets).[24] The rug mentioned in the Kaptavan inscriptions is composed of three arches, "covered with vegatative ornaments", and bears an artistic resemblance to the illuminated manuscripts produced in Artsakh.[24]

The art of carpet weaving was in addition intimately connected to the making of curtains as evidenced in a passage by Kirakos Gandzaketsi, a 13th-century Armenian historian from Artsakh, who praised Arzu-Khatun, the wife of regional prince Vakhtang Khachenatsi, and her daughters for their expertise and skill in weaving.[25]

According to ancient perceptions, the carpet is the universe where, according to mythological conceptions, there is

  1. The sacred center,
  2. The cosmic space,
  3. The zone demarcating and protecting the universe.[26]

Azerbaijan edit

The Gultapin excavations discovered several carpet weaving tools which date back to the 4th-3rd millennium BC. According to Iranica Online "The main weaving zone was in the eastern TransCaucasus south of the mountains that bisect the region diagonally, the area now comprised in the Azerbaijan SSR; it is the homeland of a Turkic population known today as Azeri. Other ethnic groups also practiced weaving, some of them in other parts of the Caucasus, but they were of lesser importance."[27] Azerbaijan was one of the most important centers of carpet weaving and as a result of that, several different schools have evolved. While traditionally schools are divided into four main branches, each region has its own version of the carpets. The Schools are divided into four main branches: Kuba-Shirvan, Ganja-Kazakh carpet-weaving school, The Baku carpet school, Karabakh school of carpet weaving.[28] Carpet weaving is a family tradition in Azerbaijan which is transferred verbally and with practicing and also associated with the daily life and customs of its people. A variety of carpet and rug types are made in Azerbaijan such as silk, wool, gold and silver threads, pile and pileless carpets, as well as, kilim, sumakh, zili, verni, mafrashi and khurjun. In 2010, traditional art of Azerbaijani carpet weaving was added to the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity of UNESCO.[29][28]

China edit

As opposed to most antique rug manufactory practices, early Chinese carpets were woven almost exclusively for internal consumption.[30] China has a long history of exporting traditional goods; however, it was not until the first half of the 19th century that the Chinese began to export their rugs. Once in contact with western influences, there was a large change in production: Chinese manufactories began to produce art-deco rugs with commercial look and price point. The centuries-old Chinese textile industry is rich in history. While most antique carpets are classified according to a specific region or manufactory, scholars attribute the age of any specific Chinese rug to the ruling emperor of the time. The earliest surviving examples of the craft were produced during the time of Ch'ung Chen, the last emperor of the Chen Dynasty.

India edit

Carpet weaving may have been introduced into the area as far back as the eleventh century with the coming of the first Muslim conquerors, the Ghaznavids and the Ghauris, from the West. It can with more certainty be traced to the beginning of the Mughal dynasty in the early sixteenth century, when the last successor of Timur, Babar, extended his rule from Kabul to India to found the Mughal Empire. Under the patronage of the Mughals, Indian craftsmen adopted Persian techniques and designs. Carpets woven in the Punjab made use of motifs and decorative styles found in Mughal architecture.

Akbar, a Mogul emperor, is accredited to introducing the art of carpet weaving to India during his reign. The Mughal emperors patronized Persian carpets for their royal courts and palaces. During this period, he brought Persian craftsmen from their homeland and established them in India. Initially, these Mughal carpets showed the classic Persian style of fine knotting, then gradually the style blended with Indian art. Thus the carpets produced became typical of Indian origin and the industry began to diversify and spread all over the subcontinent. During the Mughal period, carpets made on the Indian subcontinent became so famous that demand for them spread abroad. These carpets had distinctive designs and boasted a high density of knots. Carpets made for the Mughal emperors, including Jahangir and Shah Jahan, were of the finest quality. Under Shah Jahan's reign, Mughal carpet weaving took on a new aesthetic and entered its classical phase.[citation needed] Indian carpets are well known for their designs with attention to detail and presentation of realistic attributes. The carpet industry in India flourished more in its northern part with major centres found in Kashmir, Jaipur, Agra and Bhadohi.

Indian carpets are known for their high density of knotting. Hand-knotted carpets are a speciality and widely in demand in the West. The carpet industry in India has been successful in establishing social business models that help underprivileged sections of the society. Notable examples of social entrepreneurship ventures are Jaipur rugs[31] and the Fabindia retail chain.[32]

Another category of Indian rugs which, though quite popular in most western countries, have not received much press, is hand-woven rugs of Khairabad (Citapore rugs).[citation needed] Khairabad, a small town in the Citapore (now spelled as "Sitapur") district of India had been ruled by Raja Mehmoodabad. Khairabad (Mehmoodabad Estate) was part of Oudh province which had been ruled by shi'i Muslims having Persian linkages. Citapore rugs made in Khairabad and neighbouring areas are hand-woven and distinct from tufted and knotted rugs. Flat weave is the basic weaving technique of Citapore rugs and generally cotton is the main weaving material here but jute, rayon and chenille are also popular. IKEA and Agocha have been major buyers of rugs from this area.

Iran edit

Iranian carpet is derived from Persian art and culture. Carpet-weaving in Persia dates back to the Bronze Age. The earliest surviving corpus of Persian carpets comes from the Safavid dynasty (1501–1736) in the 16th century.[33] However, painted depictions prove a longer history of production. There is much variety among classical Persian carpets of the 16th and 17th centuries. Common motifs include scrolling vine networks, arabesques, palmettes, cloud bands, medallions, and overlapping geometric compartments rather than animals and humans.[citation needed] This is because Islam, the dominant religion in that part of the world, forbids their depiction.[citation needed] Still, some show figures engaged either in the hunt or feasting scenes. The majority of these carpets are wool, but several silk examples produced in Kashan survive.[34]

Iran is also the world's largest producer and exporter of handmade carpets, producing three-quarters of the world's total output and having a share of 30% of world's export markets.[35][36] The world’s largest hand-woven carpet was produced by Iran Carpet Company (ICC) at the order of the Diwan of the Royal Court of Sultanate of Oman to cover the entire floor of the main praying hall of the Sultan Qaboos Grand Mosque (SQGM) in Muscat.[37]

Pakistan edit

The art of weaving developed in South Asia at a time when few other civilizations employed it. Excavations at Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro, ancient cities of the Indus Valley civilization, have established that the inhabitants used spindles and spun a wide variety of weaving materials. Some historians consider that the Indus Valley civilization first developed the use of woven textiles. As of the late 1990s, hand-knotted carpets were among Pakistan's leading export products and their manufacture is the second largest cottage and small industry. Pakistani craftsmen have the capacity to produce any type of carpet using all the popular motifs of gulls, medallions, paisleys, traceries, and geometric designs in various combinations.[38] At the time of independence, manufacturing of carpets was set up in Sangla Hill, a small town of District Sheikhupura. Chaudary Mukhtar Ahmad Member son of Maher Ganda introduced and taught this art to locals and immigrants. He is considered founder of this industry in Pakistan. Sangla Hill is now a focal point of the carpet industry in Pakistan. Almost all the exporters and manufacturers who are running their business at Lahore, Faisalabad and Karachi have their area offices in Sangla Hill.

 
A Tree of Life pattern
 
The Carpet Seller (Giulio Rosati)

Scandinavia edit

Scandinavian rugs are among the most popular of all weaves in modern design. Preferred by influential modernist thinkers, designers, and advocates for a new aesthetic in the mid-twentieth century, Scandinavian rugs have become very widespread in many different avenues of contemporary interior design. With a long history of adaptation and evolution, the tradition of Scandinavian rug-making is among the most storied of all European rug-making traditions.

Turkey edit

 
Oushak (Usak) carpet (late 19th century)
 
Kayseri prayer rug from Anatolia, Turkey

Turkish carpets (also known as Anatolian), whether hand knotted or flat woven, are among the most well known and established hand crafted art works in the world.[39] Historically: religious, cultural, environmental, sociopolitical and socioeconomic conditions created widespread utilitarian need and have provided artistic inspiration among the many tribal peoples and ethnic groups in Central Asia and Turkey.[40] Turks; nomadic or pastoral, agrarian or town dwellers, living in tents or in sumptuous houses in large cities, have protected themselves from the extremes of the cold weather by covering the floors, and sometimes walls and doorways, with carpets and rugs. The carpets are always hand made of wool or sometimes cotton, with occasional additions of silk. These carpets are natural barriers against the cold. Turkish pile rugs and kilims are also frequently used as tent decorations, grain bags, camel and donkey bags, ground cushions, oven covers, sofa covers, bed and cushion covers, blankets, curtains, eating blankets, table top spreads, prayer rugs and for ceremonial occasions.

The oldest records of flat woven kilims come from Çatalhöyük Neolithic pottery, circa 7000 B.C. One of the oldest settlements ever to have been discovered, Çatalhöyük is located south east of Konya in the middle of the Anatolian region.[41] The excavations to date (only 3% of the town) not only found carbonized fabric but also fragments of kilims painted on the walls of some of the dwellings. The majority of them represent geometric and stylized forms that are similar or identical to other historical and contemporary designs.[42]

The knotted rug is believed to have reached Asia Minor and the Middle East with the expansion of various nomadic tribes peoples during the latter period of the great Turkic migration of the 8th and 9th centuries. Famously depicted in European paintings of The Renaissance, beautiful Anatolian rugs were often used from then until modern times, to indicate the high economic and social status of the owner.

Women learn their weaving skills at an early age, taking months or even years to complete the beautiful pile rugs and flat woven kilims that were created for their use in every aspect of daily life. As is true in most weaving cultures, traditionally and nearly exclusively, it is women and girls who are both artisan and weaver.[43][44][45]

Turkmen edit

 
The largest hand-woven carpet in the world at the Turkmen Carpet Museum in Ashgabat

Türkmen carpet (also called "Bukhara Uzbekistan") is a type of handmade floor-covering textile traditionally originating in Central Asia. It is useful to distinguish between the original Turkmen tribal rugs and the rugs produced in large numbers for export in the 2000s, mainly in Pakistan and Iran. The original Turkmen rugs were produced by the Turkmen tribes who are the main ethnic group in Turkmenistan and are also found in Afghanistan and Iran. They are used for various purposes, including tent rugs, door hangings and bags of various sizes.[46]

Uyghur edit

Weaving was traditionally done by men in Uyghur society. Scholars speculate that when the Mongols invaded northwest China in the 13th century, under the leadership of General Subutai, they may have taken as captives some of these skilled carpet weavers.[47]

Europe edit

 
Tapestry State Gift of Honour - GDR - Tapestry - 20 Years of the Fighting Group of the Working Class

Oriental imports edit

Oriental carpets began to appear in Europe after the Crusades in the 11th century, due to contact by Crusaders with Eastern traders. Until the mid-18th century they were mostly used on walls and tables. Except in royal or ecclesiastical settings they were considered too precious to cover the floor. Starting in the 13th century oriental carpets begin to appear in paintings (notably from Italy, Flanders, England, France, and the Netherlands). Carpets of Indo-Persian design were introduced to Europe via the Dutch, British, and French East India Companies of the 17th and 18th century[48] and in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth by Armenian merchants (Polish carpets or Polonaise carpets).[13]

Spain edit

 
The 16th-century Alcaraz rug at the Nazmiyal collection

Although isolated instances of carpet production pre-date the Muslim invasion of Spain, the Hispano-Moresque examples are the earliest significant body of European-made carpets. Documentary evidence shows production beginning in Spain as early as the 10th century AD. The earliest extant Spanish carpet, the so-called Synagogue carpet in the Museum of Islamic Art, Berlin, is a unique survival dated to the 14th century. The earliest group of Hispano-Moresque carpets, Admiral carpets (also known as armorial carpets), has an all-over geometric, repeat pattern punctuated by blazons of noble, Christian Spanish families. The variety of this design was analyzed most thoroughly by May Beattie. Many of the 15th-century, Spanish carpets rely heavily on designs originally developed on the Anatolian Peninsula.[citation needed] Carpet production continued after the Reconquest of Spain and eventual expulsion of the Muslim population in the 15th century. 16th-century Renaissance Spanish carpet design is a derivative of silk textile design. Some of the most popular motifs are wreaths, acanthus leaves and pomegranates.

During the Moorish (Muslim) period production took place in Alcaraz in the province of Albacete, as well as being recorded in other towns. Carpet production after the Christian reconquest continued in Alcaraz while Cuenca, first recorded as a weaving centre in the 12th century, became increasingly important, and was dominant in the 17th and early 18th century. Carpets of completely different French based designs began to be woven in a royal workshop, the Royal Tapestry Factory (Real Fábrica de Tapices de Santa Bárbara) in Madrid in the 18th century. Cuenca was closed down by the royal degree of Carlos IV in the late 18th century to stop it competing with the new workshop. Madrid continued as a weaving centre through to the 20th century, producing brightly coloured carpets most of whose designs are strongly influenced by French carpet design, and which are frequently signed (on occasions with the monogram MD; also sometimes with the name Stuyck) and dated in the outer stripe. After the Spanish Civil War General Franco revived the carpet weaving industry in workshops named after him, weaving designs that are influenced by earlier Spanish carpets, usually in a very limited range of colours.[49]

Serbia edit

Pirot carpet[a] (Serbian: Пиротски ћилим, Pirotski ćilim) refers to a variety of flat tapestry-woven carpets or rugs traditionally produced in Pirot, a town in southeastern Serbia. Pirot kilims with some 122 ornaments and 96 different types have been protected by geographical indication in 2002. They are one of the most important traditional handicrafts in Serbia. In the late 19th century and up to the Second World War, Pirot kilims have been frequently used as insignia of Serbian and Yugoslav royalty. This tradition was revived in 2011 when Pirot kilims were reintroduced for state ceremonies in Serbia. Carpet weaving in Pirot dates back to the Middle Ages.[50][full citation needed] One of the first mentions of the Pirot kilim in written sources date to 1565, when it was said that the šajkaši boats on the Danube and Drava were covered with Pirot kilims. Pirot was once the most important rug-making centre in the Balkans. Pirot is located on the historical main highway which linked central Europe with Constantinople. Pirot was also known as Şarköy in Turkish. The Pirot carpet varieties are also found in Bulgaria and Turkey, and in many other international collections. One of the chief qualities are the colour effects achieved through the choice and arrangement of colours.

In the beginning of the 19th century plant dyes were replaced by aniline colourings. "The best product of the country is the Pirot carpet, worth about ten shillings a square metre. The designs are extremely pretty, and the rugs, without being so heavy as the Persian, or so ragged and scant in the web and weft as Caramanian, wear for ever. The manufacture of these is almost entirely confined to Pirot. From Pirots old Turkish signification as Şarköy stems the traditional trade name of the rugs as Şarköy-kilims. Stemming from the homonym to the today's Turkish settlement of Şarköy in Thracia, which had no established rug making tradition, Şarköys are often falsely ascribed to originate from Turkey. Also in the rug selling industry, Şarköy are mostly labeled as being of oriental or Turkish origin as to easier sell them to non familiar customers as they prefer rug with putative oriental origin. In fact, Şarköys have been established from the 17th century in the region of the Western Balkan or Stara Planina mountains in the towns of Pirot, Berkowiza, Lom, Chiprovtsi and Samokow. Later they have been also produced in Knjaževac and Caribrod.

Bulgaria edit

The Chiprovtsi carpet (Чипровци килим) is a type of handmade carpet with two absolutely identical sides, part of Bulgarian national heritage, traditions, arts and crafts. Its name is derived from the town of Chiprovtsi where their production started in the 17th century. The carpet weaving industry played a key role in the revival of Chiprovtsi in the 1720s after the devastation of the failed 1688 Chiprovtsi Uprising against Ottoman rule. The western traveller Ami Boué, who visited Chiprovtsi in 1836–1838, reported that "mainly young girls, under shelters or in corridors, engage in carpet weaving. They earn only five francs a month and the payment was even lower before". By 1868, the annual production of carpets in Chiprovtsi had surpassed 14,000 square metres.[51][full citation needed] In 1896, almost 1,400 women from Chiprovtsi and the region were engaged in carpet weaving. In 1920, the locals founded the Manual Labour carpet-weaving cooperative society, the first of its kind in the country.[52][full citation needed] At present. the carpet (kilim) industry remains dominant in the town.[53] Carpets have been crafted according to traditional designs, but in recent years it is up to the customers to decide the pattern of the carpet they have ordered. The production of a single 3 by 4 m (9.8 by 13.1 ft) carpet takes about 50 days; primarily women engage in carpet weaving. Work is entirely manual and all used materials are natural; the primary material is wool, coloured using plant or mineral dyes. The local carpets have been prized at exhibitions in London, Paris, Liège and Brussels. In recent decades, however, the Chiprovtsi carpet industry has been in decline as it had lost its firm foreign markets. As a result, the town and the municipality have been experiencing a demographic crisis.

France edit

In 1608 Henry IV initiated the French production of "Turkish style" carpets under the direction of Pierre DuPont. This production was soon moved to the Savonnerie factory in Chaillot just west of Paris. The earliest, well-known group produced by the Savonnerie, then under the direction of Simon Lourdet, are the carpets that were produced in the early years of Louis XIV's reign. They are densely ornamented with flowers, sometimes in vases or baskets, against dark blue or brown grounds in deep borders. The designs are based on Netherlandish and Flemish textiles and paintings. The most famous Savonnerie carpets are the series made for the Grande Galerie and the Galerie d'Apollon in the Palais du Louvre between c. 1665-1685. These 105 masterpieces, made under the artistic direction of Charles Le Brun, were never installed, as Louis XIV moved the court to Versailles in 1688. Their design combines rich acanthus leaves, architectural framing, and mythological scenes (inspired by Cesare Ripa's Iconologie) with emblems of Louis XIV's royal power.

Pierre-Josse Joseph Perrot is the best-known of the mid-eighteenth-century carpet designers. His many surviving works and drawings display graceful rococo s-scrolls, central rosettes, shells, acanthus leaves, and floral swags. The Savonnerie manufactory was moved to the Gobelins in Paris in 1826.[54] The Beauvais manufactory, better known for their tapestry, also made knotted pile carpets from 1780 to 1792. Carpet production in small, privately owned workshops in the town of Aubusson began in 1743. Carpets produced in France employ the symmetrical knot.[49]

England edit

 
Machine used to cut and re-roll carpet lengths

Knotted pile carpet weaving technology probably came to England in the early 16th century with Flemish Calvinists fleeing religious persecution. Because many of these weavers settled in south-eastern England, particularly in Norwich, the 14 extant 16th and 17th century carpets are sometimes referred to as "Norwich carpets". These works are either adaptations of Anatolian or Indo-Persian designs, or employ Elizabethan-Jacobean scrolling vines and blossoms; all but one are dated or bear a coat of arms. Like the French, English weavers used the symmetrical knot. There are documented and surviving examples of carpets from three 18th-century manufactories: Exeter (1756–1761, owned by Claude Passavant, 3 extant carpets), Moorfields (1752–1806, owned by Thomas Moore, 5 extant), and Axminster (1755–1835, owned by Thomas Whitty, numerous extant).

Exeter and Moorfields were both staffed with renegade weavers from the French Savonnerie and, therefore, employ the weaving structure of that factory and Perrot-inspired designs. Neoclassical designer Robert Adam supplied designs for both Moorfields and Axminster carpets based on Roman floor mosaics and coffered ceilings. Some of the most well-known rugs of his design were made for Syon House, Osterley House, Harewood House, Saltram House, and Newby Hall.

Axminster carpet edit

Axminster carpet was a unique floor covering first made in a factory founded at Axminster, Devon, in 1755 by the cloth weaver Thomas Whitty. Resembling somewhat the Savonnerie carpets produced in France, Axminster carpets were symmetrically knotted by hand in wool on woollen warps, and had a weft of flax or hemp. Like the French carpets, they often featured Renaissance architectural or floral patterns; others mimicked oriental patterns. Similar carpets were produced at the same time in Exeter and in the Moorfields area of London and, shortly before, at Fulham in Middlesex. The Whitty factory closed in 1835 with the advent of machine-made carpeting. The name Axminster, however, survived as a generic term for machine-made carpets whose pile is produced by techniques similar to those used in making velvet or chenille,[55] and Axminster Carpets Ltd resumed production at a new site in the town in 1937.[56]

Axminster carpets can use the three main types of broadloom carpet construction: machine-woven, tufted and hand-knotted. Machine-woven carpet is an investment that will last 20 or 30 years, and woven Axminster and Wilton carpets are still popular in areas where longevity and design flexibility are a big part of the purchasing decision. Hotels and leisure venues almost always choose these types, and many homes use woven Axminsters as design statements.

Machine-woven carpets like Axminster and Wilton are made by massive looms that weave together 'bobbins' of carpet yarn and backing. The finished result, which can be intricately patterned, creates a floor that provides supreme underfoot luxury with high performance. Tufted carpets are also popular in the home. They are relatively speedy to make: a pre-woven backing has yarns tufted into it. Needles push the yarn through the backing, which is then held in place with underlying "loopers". Tufted carpets can be twist pile, velvet, or loop pile. Twist pile carpets are produced when one or more fibres are twisted in the tufting process, so that in the finished carpet they appear to be bound together. Velvet pile carpets tend to have a shorter pile and a tighter construction, giving the finished article a smooth, velvety appearance. Loop pile carpets are renowned for being hard wearing and lend carpets great texture. The traditional domain of rugs from faraway continents, hand knotted squares and rugs use the expertise of weavers to produce work of the finest quality. Traditional rugs often feature a deliberate mistake on behalf of the weaver to guarantee their authenticity.

Six patterns of Axminster carpet are known as the Lansdowne group. These have a tripartite design with reeded circles and baskets of flowers in the central panel, flanked by diamond lozenges in the side panels. Axminster Rococo designs often have a brown ground and include birds copied from popular, contemporary engravings. Even now a large percentage of the 55,000 population of the town still seek employment in this industry.

Brussels and Wilton carpets edit

The town of Wilton, Wiltshire is also known for its carpet weaving, which dates back to the 18th century.[57]

The Brussels loom was introduced into England towards the middle of the eighteenth century and marked the beginning of a new era in carpet-weaving. It was the first loom on which a pile carpet could be woven mechanically, the pile consisting of rows of loops, formed over wires inserted weftwise during weaving and subsequently withdrawn. Brussels was the first type of carpet to be woven in a loom incorporating the Jacquard pattern-selecting mechanism, and in 1849 power was applied to the loom by Biglow in the United States.

Later, when bladed wires were developed, the pile loops were severed on withdrawal of the wires to produce a carpet known as Wilton, and after this development the loom became known as the Wilton loom. In modern usage the designation Wilton applies to both cut-pile and loop-pile carpets made in this loom. The latter are now variously described as Brussels-Wilton, round wire Wilton, loop-pile Wilton, and round wired Jacquard. The methods of manufacture, including the principles of design, preparatory processes, and weaving, are the same in most respects for both Brussels and Wilton qualities. The chief difference between them is that whereas Brussels loop-pile is secured satisfactorily by the insertion of two picks of weft to each wire (2-shot), the Wilton cut-pile is woven more often with three picks of weft to each wire (3-shot) to ensure that the tufts are firmly secured in the carpet backing.

Brussels carpets have a smooth slightly ribbed surface and their patterning is well defined, a characteristic feature of the carpet. Closeness of pile rather than height contributes to their neat appearance and hard wearing properties, although they do not simulate the luxury of cut-pile carpets. Brussels Wilton carpets were initially produced on 27-inch (3/4) looms and were sewn together by hand. The looms could incorporate up to five frames, each with a different colour, thus enabling figured or pattern carpets to be manufactured. With judicial and skilful planting of colours in the frames the number of colours could be increased to about twenty, enabling complex designs to be produced. Due to the additional costs in labour these carpets were normally only produced for the bespoke market.

After the First World War, the carpets started to be produced for the general market using popular designs and colourways but they always remained at the luxury end of the general market. The growing middle class of the twentieth century aspired to acquire a Wilton carpet for their 'best' room. Despite the impact of industrialization, the areas where Brussels Wilton carpets were produced remained centred around the towns of Wilton, Kidderminster in the West Midlands, and in West Yorkshire where the firm of John Crossley and Sons in Halifax became synonymous with carpet manufacture. There were smaller areas of manufacture in Scotland and Durham. With the development of different manufacturing methods and looms capable of the mass production of carpets, the public began change their décor, including carpets, on a regular basis, which increased the demand for carpets. The last quarter of the 20th century saw the rapid decline of the labour-intensive Brussels Wilton carpets. Very few of the original ¾ Wilton looms still exist, and the few that do are either in museums or used by small manufacturers that continue to produce custom made luxury carpets for the elite and to replace carpets in historic buildings in the UK and abroad.[58]

Modern carpeting and installation edit

 
Macro shot of a Berber-style carpet. Berber-style carpets feature two sizes of tufts of varying colors in a loop pile construction
 
Carpet with geometric patterns on the floor in kindergarten. Buryatia, Russia

Carpet is commonly made in widths of 12 feet (3.7 m) and 15 feet (4.6 m) in the US, 4 m and 5 m in Europe. Where necessary different widths can be seamed together with a seaming iron and seam tape (formerly it was sewn together) and it is fixed to a floor over a cushioned underlay (pad) using nails, tack strips (known in the UK as gripper rods), adhesives, or occasionally decorative metal stair rods, thus distinguishing it from rugs or mats, which are loose-laid floor coverings. For environmental reasons, the use of wool, natural bindings, natural padding, and formaldehyde-free glues is becoming more common. These options are almost always at a premium cost.

In the UK, some carpets are still manufactured for yachts, hotels, pubs and clubs in a narrow width of 27 inches (0.69 m) and then sewn to size. Carpeting which covers an entire room area is loosely referred to as 'wall-to-wall', but carpet can be installed over any portion thereof with use of appropriate transition moldings where the carpet meets other types of floor coverings. Carpeting is more than just a single item; it is, in fact, a system comprising the carpet itself, the carpet backing (often made of latex), the cushioning underlay, and a method of installation. Carpet tiles are also available, typically 50 centimetres (20 in) square. These are usually only used in commercial settings and are affixed using a special pressure-sensitive glue, which holds them into place while allowing easy removal (in an office environment, for example) or allowing rearrangement in order to spread wear.[59]

Throughout the world, commercial carpet cleaning for yachts, hotels, pubs and clubs is also a major industry. Rates for cleaning vary, with hotel restaurants being on the highest end due to frequency of traffic and staining. In such environments clean flooring is essential from both a pest extermination and public health liability standpoint, as well as maintaining the overall look and customer satisfaction of the establishment. Given the importance of upkeep, it is customary in full-service hotels with onsite food and beverage outlets for the commercial carpet cleaner to be extended privileges as the "lord of the inn," such as on the house upgraded accommodations, personal chef services, in-room entertainment, and ability to pay gratuity on hotel house accounts.[60]

"Carpet binding" is a term used for any material being applied to the edge of a carpet to make a rug. Carpet binding is usually cotton or nylon, but also comes in many other materials such as leather. Non-synthetic binding is frequently used with bamboo, grass and wool rugs, but is often used with carpet made from other materials.

The GoodWeave labelling scheme used throughout Europe and North America assures that child labour has not been used: importers pay for the labels, and the revenue collected is used to monitor centres of production and educate previously exploited children.[61]

Disposal edit

For the year 2018 in the U.S., the recycling of carpet fiber, backing, and padding was 310,000 tons, which was 9.2 percent of carpet generation. A slightly larger proportion (17.8 percent) was combusted for energy recovery, while the majority of rugs and carpets were landfilled (73 percent).[62]

In culture and figurative expressions edit

 
Jean-Léon Gérôme - The Carpet Merchant

There are many stories about magic carpets, legendary flying carpets that can be used to transport people who are on it instantaneously or quickly to their destination. Disney's Aladdin depicts a magic carpet found by Aladdin and Abu in the Cave of Wonders while trying to find Genie's lamp. Aladdin and Jasmine ride on him to go on a ride around the world. The term "[m]agic carpet [is] first attested [in] 1816.[5] From the 16th century to the 19th century, the term "carpet" was used "...as an adjective often with a tinge of contempt, when used of men (as in carpet-knight, 1570s)", which meant a man who was associated with "...luxury, ladies' boudoirs, and drawing rooms".[5] Rolling out the red carpet is an expression which means to welcome a guest lavishly and handsomely. In some cases, an actual red carpet is used for VIPs and celebrities to walk on, such as at the Cannes Film Festival and when foreign dignitaries are welcomed to a country.

In 1820s British servant slang, to "carpet" someone means to call them for a reprimand.[5] To be called on the carpet means to be summoned for a serious reason, typically a scolding reprimand; this usage dates from 1900,[63] referring to the carpeted office of a person in authority, such as a schoolmaster or employer. A stronger variant of this expression, to be "hauled on the carpet", implies an even sterner reprimand. Carpet bombing is a type of bombing from airplanes which developed in the 20th century in which an entire city is bombed (rather than precise strikes on military targets). The slang expression "laugh at the carpet" means to vomit on the floor (especially a carpeted floor).[64] The expression "on the carpet" refers to a matter which is under discussion or consideration.[64] The term "carpet muncher" is a derogatory slang term for a lesbian; this expression is first attested in 1992.[65]

The term carpet bag, which literally refers to a suitcase made from a piece of carpet, is used in several figurative contexts. The term gained a popular usage after the American Civil War to refer to carpetbaggers, Northerners who moved to the South after the war, especially during the Reconstruction era (1865–1877). Carpetbaggers allegedly politically manipulated and controlled former Confederate states for financial and power gains. In modern usage in the U.S., the term is sometimes used derisively to refer to a politician who runs for public office in an area where he or she does not have deep community ties, or has lived only for a short time. In the United Kingdom, the term was adopted to refer informally to those who join a mutual organization, such as a building society, in order to force it to demutualize, that is, to convert into a joint stock company, solely for personal financial gain.

Cutting the rug is a slang term for dancing which originated in 1942.[7] The use of the term "rug" as an informal term for a "toupee" (man's wig) is theater slang from 1940.[7] The term "sweep [something] under the rug" or "sweep [something] under the carpet" figuratively refers to situations where a person or organization is hiding something embarrassing or negative; this use was first recorded in 1953.[5] The figurative expression "pull the rug out from under (someone)", meaning to "suddenly deprive of important support" is first attested to in 1936, in American English. A related figurative expression used centuries earlier was "cut the grass under (one's) feet", which is attested to in the 1580s.[7] A "rugrat" or "rug-rat" is a slang term for a baby or child, first attested in 1968.[7] The expression "snug as a bug in a rug" means "wrapped up tight, warm, and comfortable".[66] To "lie like a rug" means "to tell lies shamelessly".[67] The expression "pull the rug out (from under someone)" means "to make someone or someone's plans fall through" or "to upset someone's plans".[68]

See also edit

References edit

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    Л.С. Гавриленко, Р.Б. Румянцева, Д.Н. Глебовская, Применение тонкослойной хромотографии и электронной спектроскопии для анализа красителей древних тканей. Исследование, консервация и реставрация этнографических предметов. Тезисы докладов, СССР, Рига, 1987, стр. 17–18.

    В ковре нити темно-синего и голубого цвета окрашены индиго по карминоносным червецам, нити красного цвета – аналогичными червецами типа араратской кошенили.

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Further reading edit

  • Walker, Daniel (1997). Flowers Underfoot: Indian Carpets of the Mughal Era. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 0810965100. OCLC 893698548.

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For other uses see Carpet disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Carpet news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message A carpet is a textile floor covering typically consisting of an upper layer of pile attached to a backing The pile was traditionally made from wool but since the 20th century synthetic fibers such as polypropylene nylon or polyester have often been used as these fibers are less expensive than wool The pile usually consists of twisted tufts that are typically heat treated to maintain their structure The term carpet is often used in a similar context to the term rug but rugs are typically considered to be smaller than a room and not attached to the floor 1 One of the Ardabil CarpetsA small rug Turkish woolen carpetCarpets are used for a variety of purposes which includes insulating a person s feet from a cold tile or concrete floor making a room more comfortable as a place to sit on the floor e g when playing with children or as a prayer rug reducing sound from walking particularly in apartment buildings and adding decoration or color to a room Carpets can be made in any color by using differently dyed fibers Carpets can have many different types of patterns and motifs used to decorate the surface Carpets are used in industrial and commercial establishments such as retail stores and hotels and in private homes Today a huge range of carpets and rugs are available at many price and quality levels ranging from inexpensive synthetic carpets that are mass produced in factories and used in commercial buildings to costly hand knotted wool rugs that are used in private residences Carpets can be produced on a loom quite similarly to woven fabric made using needle felts knotted by hand in oriental rugs made with their pile injected into a backing material called tufting flatwoven made by hooking wool or cotton through the meshes of a sturdy fabric or embroidered Carpet is commonly made in widths of 12 feet 3 7 m and 15 feet 4 6 m in the US and 4 m 13 ft and 5 m 16 ft in Europe Since the 19th and 20th century where necessary for wall to wall carpet different widths of carpet can be seamed together with a seaming iron and seam tape formerly it was sewn together and fixed to a floor over a cushioned underlay pad using nails tack strips known in the UK as gripper rods adhesives or occasionally decorative metal stair rods Wall to wall carpet is distinguished from rugs or mats which are loose laid floor coverings as wall to wall carpet is fixed to the floor and covers a much larger area Contents 1 Etymology and usage 2 Types 2 1 Woven 2 2 Needle felt 2 3 Knotted 2 4 Tufted 2 5 Others 3 Fibres and yarns 3 1 Nylon 3 2 Polypropylene 3 3 Wool and wool blends 3 4 Polyester 3 5 Acrylic 4 History 4 1 Afghanistan 4 2 Armenia 4 3 Azerbaijan 4 4 China 4 5 India 4 6 Iran 4 7 Pakistan 4 8 Scandinavia 4 9 Turkey 4 10 Turkmen 4 11 Uyghur 4 12 Europe 4 12 1 Oriental imports 4 12 2 Spain 4 12 3 Serbia 4 12 4 Bulgaria 4 12 5 France 4 12 6 England 4 12 6 1 Axminster carpet 4 12 6 2 Brussels and Wilton carpets 5 Modern carpeting and installation 6 Disposal 7 In culture and figurative expressions 8 See also 9 References 10 Further readingEtymology and usage edit nbsp A carpet seller in Jaipur IndiaThe term carpet comes from Latin carpita 2 Old French carpite 2 One derivation of the term states that the French term came from the Old Italian carpita from the verb carpire meaning to pluck 3 4 The Online Etymology Dictionary states that the term carpet was first used in English in the late 13th century with the meaning coarse cloth and by the mid 14th century tablecloth or bedspread 5 The word comes from Old French carpite heavy decorated cloth carpet from Medieval Latin or Old Italian carpita thick woolen cloth which may derive from Latin carpere to card pluck 5 The meaning of the term carpet shifted in the 15th century to refer to floor coverings 5 The terms carpet and rug are often used interchangeably A carpet is sometimes defined as stretching from wall to wall 6 Another definition treats rugs as of lower quality or of smaller size with carpets quite often having finished ends A third common definition is that a carpet is permanently fixed in place while a rug is simply laid out on the floor Historically the term carpet was also applied to table and wall coverings as carpets were not commonly used on the floor in European interiors until the 15th century The term rug was first used in English in the 1550s with the meaning coarse fabric The term is of Scandinavian origin comparable to Norwegian rugga coarse coverlet from Old Norse rogg shaggy tuft from Proto Germanic rawwa 7 The meaning of rug evolved to coverlet wrap 1590s then mat for the floor 1808 7 Types edit nbsp Modern carpet illustrating a camel caravan on the Silk RoadWoven edit The carpet is produced on a loom quite similar to woven fabric The pile can be plush or Berber Plush carpet is a cut pile and Berber carpet is a loop pile There are new styles of carpet combining the two styles called cut and loop carpeting Normally many colored yarns are used and this process is capable of producing intricate patterns from predetermined designs although some limitations apply to certain weaving methods with regard to accuracy of pattern within the carpet These carpets are usually the most expensive due to the relatively slow speed of the manufacturing process These are very famous in Turkey Iran India Pakistan and Arabia Needle felt edit nbsp A toranj medallion a common design in Persian carpetsNeedle felt carpets are more technologically advanced These carpets are produced by intermingling and felting individual synthetic fibers using barbed and forked needles forming an extremely durable carpet These carpets are normally found in commercial settings where there is frequent traffic such as hotels and restaurants Knotted edit Main article Knotted pile carpet nbsp A traditional rug being woven on a carpet loomOn a knotted pile carpet formally a supplementary weft cut loop pile carpet the structural weft threads alternate with a supplementary weft that rises at right angles to the surface of the weave This supplementary weft is attached to the warp by one of three knot types see below such as shag carpet which was popular in the 1970s to form the pile or nap of the carpet Knotting by hand is most prevalent in oriental rugs and carpets Kashmir carpets are also hand knotted Pile carpets like flat carpets can be woven on a loom Both vertical and horizontal looms have been used in the production of European and oriental carpets The warp threads are set up on the frame of the loom before weaving begins A number of weavers may work together on the same carpet A row of knots is completed and cut The knots are secured with usually one to four rows of weft The warp in woven carpet is usually cotton and the weft is jute citation needed There are several styles of knotting but the two main types of knot are the symmetrical also called Turkish or Ghiordes and asymmetrical also called Persian or Senna Contemporary centres of knotted carpet production are Lahore and Peshawar Pakistan Kashmir India Mirzapur and Bhadohi India 8 Tabriz Iran Afghanistan Armenia Azerbaijan Turkey Northern Africa Nepal Spain Turkmenistan and Tibet The importance of carpets in the culture of Turkmenistan is such that the national flag features a vertical red stripe near the hoist side containing five carpet guls designs used in producing rugs Kashmir and bhadohi is known for handknotted carpets of silk or wool Tufted edit nbsp Swatches of tufted carpet nbsp Drying carpets in a village workshop at the Ourika Valley MoroccoThese are carpets that have their pile injected with the help of tufting gun into a backing material which is itself then bonded to a secondary backing made of a woven hessian weave or a man made alternative to provide stability The pile is often sheared in order to achieve different textures This is the most common method of manufacturing of domestic carpets for floor covering purposes in the world Others edit A flatweave carpet is created by interlocking warp vertical and weft horizontal threads Types of oriental flatwoven carpet include kilim soumak plain weave and tapestry weave Types of European flatwoven carpets include Venetian Dutch damask list haircloth and ingrain aka double cloth two ply triple cloth or three ply A hooked rug is a simple type of rug handmade by pulling strips of cloth such as wool or cotton through the meshes of a sturdy fabric such as burlap This type of rug is now generally made as a handicraft The process of creating a hooked rug is called Rug hooking 9 Unlike woven carpets embroidery carpets are not formed on a loom Their pattern is established by the application of stitches to a cloth often linen base The tent stitch and the cross stitch are two of the most common Embroidered carpets were traditionally made by royal and aristocratic women in the home but there has been some commercial manufacture since steel needles were introduced earlier needles were made of bone and linen weaving improved in the 16th century Mary Queen of Scots is known to have been an avid embroiderer 16th century designs usually involve scrolling vines and regional flowers for example the Bradford carpet They often incorporate animal heraldry and the coat of arms of the maker Production continued through the 19th century Victorian embroidered carpet compositions include highly illusionistic 3 dimensional flowers Patterns for tiled carpets made of a number of squares called Berlin wool work were introduced in Germany in 1804 and became extremely popular in England in the 1830s Embroidered carpets can also include other features such as a pattern of shapes or they can even tell a story Fibres and yarns edit nbsp A Moldovan stamp featuring a carpetCarpet can be formulated from many single or blended natural and synthetic fibres Fibres are chosen for durability appearance ease of manufacture and cost In terms of scale of production the dominant yarn constructions are polyamides nylons and polypropylene with an estimated 90 of the commercial market 10 Nylon edit Since the 20th century nylon is one of the most common materials for the construction of carpets Both nylon 6 and nylon 6 6 are used Nylon can be dyed topically or dyed in a molten state solution dying Nylon can be printed easily and has excellent wear characteristics Due to nylon s excellent wear resistance it is widely used in industrial and commercial carpeting In carpets nylon tends to stain easily due to the presence of dye sites These dye sites need to be filled in order to give nylon carpet any type of stain resistance As nylon is petroleum based it varies in price with the price of oil Polypropylene edit Polypropylene a polyolefin stiffer than the cheaper polyethylene is used to produce carpet yarns because it is still less expensive than the other materials used for carpets It is difficult to dye and does not wear as well as wool or nylon Polypropylene sometimes referred to simply as olefin is commonly used to construct berber carpets Large looped olefin berber carpets are usually only suited for light domestic use and tend to mat down quickly Berber carpets with smaller loops tend to be more resilient and retain their new appearance longer than large looped berber styles Commercial grade level loop carpets have very small loops and commercial grade cut pile styles can be well constructed When made with polypropylene commercial grade styles wear very well making them very suitable for areas with heavy foot traffic such as offices Polypropylene carpets are known to have good stain resistance but not against oil based agents If a stain does set it can be difficult to clean Commercial grade carpets can be glued directly to the floor or installed over a 1 4 thick 8 pound density padding Outdoor grass carpets are usually made from polypropylene Wool and wool blends edit nbsp A wool carpetWool has excellent durability can be dyed easily and is fairly abundant When blended with synthetic fibres such as nylon the durability of wool is increased Blended wool yarns are extensively used in production of modern carpet with the most common blend being 80 wool to 20 synthetic fibre giving rise to the term 80 20 Wool is relatively expensive and consequently it only comprises a small portion of the market Polyester edit The polyester known as PET polyethylene terephthalate is used in carpet manufacturing in both spun and filament constructions After the price of raw materials for many types of carpet rose in the early 2000s polyester became more competitive Polyester has good physical properties and is inherently stain resistant because it is hydrophobic however oil based stains can pose a problem for this type of material and it can be prone to soiling Similar to nylon colour can be added after production or it can be infused in a molten state solution dyeing Polyester has the disadvantage that it tends to crush or mat down easily It is typically used in mid to low priced carpeting Another polyester PTT Polytrimethylene terephthalate also called Sorona or 3GT Dupont or Corterra Shell is a variant of PET Lurgi Zimmer PTT was first patented in 1941 but it was not produced until the 1990s when Shell Chemicals developed the low cost method of producing high quality 1 3 propanediol PDO the starting raw material for PTT Corterra Polymers DuPont subsequently commercialized a biological process for making 1 3 propanediol from corn syrup imparting significant renewable content on the corresponding Sorona polyester carpet fibers 11 These carpet fibers have resiliency comparable to nylon 12 Acrylic edit Acrylic is a synthetic material first created by the Dupont Corporation in 1941 but has gone through various changes since it was first introduced In the past acrylic carpet used to fuzz or pill easily This happened when the fibres degraded over time and short strands broke away with contact or friction Over the years new types of acrylics have been developed to alleviate some of these problems although the issues have not been completely removed Acrylic is fairly difficult to dye but is colourfast washable and has the feel and appearance of wool making it a good rug fabric History edit nbsp The Pazyryk Carpet the oldest surviving carpet in the world Armenia or Persia 5th century BC nbsp The Czartoryski carpet with coat of arms of the Polish Myszkowski family 13 made with a cotton warp a silk weft and pile and metal wrapped thread Iran 17th century The knotted pile carpet probably originated in the Caspian Sea area Northern Iran 14 or the Armenian Highland 15 Although there is evidence of goats and sheep being sheared for wool and hair which was spun and woven as far back at the 7th millennium the earliest surviving pile carpet is the Pazyryk carpet which dates from the 5th 4th century BC It was excavated by Sergei Ivanovich Rudenko in 1949 from a Pazyryk burial mound in the Altai Mountains in Siberia This richly coloured carpet is 200 x 183 cm 6 6 x 6 0 and framed by a border of griffins 16 Although claimed by many cultures this square tufted carpet almost perfectly intact is considered by many experts to be of Caucasian specifically Armenian origin The rug is woven using the Armenian double knot and the red filaments color was made from Armenian cochineal 17 18 The eminent authority of ancient carpets Ulrich Schurmann says of it From all the evidence available I am convinced that the Pazyryk rug was a funeral accessory and most likely a masterpiece of Armenian workmanship 19 Gantzhorn concurs with this thesis At the ruins of Persepolis in Iran where various nations are depicted as bearing tribute the horse design from the Pazyryk carpet is the same as the relief depicting part of the Armenian delegation 15 The historian Herodotus writing in the 5th century BC also informs us that the inhabitants of the Caucasus wove beautiful rugs with brilliant colors which would never fade 20 Afghanistan edit Main article Afghan rug There has recently been a surge in demand for Afghan carpets although many Afghan carpet manufacturers market their products under the name of a different country 21 The carpets are made in Afghanistan as well as by Afghan refugees who reside in Pakistan and Iran Famous Afghan rugs include the Shindand or Adraskan named after local Afghan villages woven in the Herat area in western Afghanistan Afghan carpets are commonly known as Afghan rugs Afghan carpets are a unique and well recognized handmade material design that originates from Afghanistan They often exhibit intricate detailing mainly using traditional tribal designs originating from the Turkmen Kazakh Baloch and Uzbeks The hand made rugs come in many patterns and colors yet the traditional and most common example of Afghan carpet is the octagon shaped elephant foot Bukhara The rugs with this print are most commonly red in color Many dyes such as vegetable dyes are used to impart rich color Armenia edit Main article Armenian carpet Various rug fragments have been excavated in Armenia dating back to the 7th century BC or earlier The oldest single surviving knotted carpet in existence is the Pazyryk carpet excavated from a frozen tomb in Siberia dated from the 5th to the 3rd century BC now in the Hermitage Museum in St Petersburg This square tufted carpet almost perfectly intact is considered by many experts to be of Caucasian specifically Armenian origin The eminent authority of ancient carpets Ulrich Schurmann says of it From all the evidence available I am convinced that the Pazyryk rug was a funeral accessory and most likely a masterpiece of Armenian workmanship 22 Gantzhorn concurs with this thesis At the ruins of Persepolis in Iran where various nations are depicted as bearing tribute the horse design from the Pazyryk carpet is the same as the relief depicting part of the Armenian delegation Armenian carpets were renowned by foreigners who travelled to Artsakh the Arab geographer and historian Al Masudi noted that among other works of art he had never seen such carpets elsewhere in his life 23 Art historian Hravard Hakobyan notes that Artsakh carpets occupy a special place in the history of Armenian carpet making 24 Common themes and patterns found on Armenian carpets were the depiction of dragons and eagles They were diverse in style rich in colour and ornamental motifs and were even separated in categories depending on what sort of animals were depicted on them such as artsvagorgs eagle carpets vishapagorgs dragon carpets and otsagorgs serpent carpets 24 The rug mentioned in the Kaptavan inscriptions is composed of three arches covered with vegatative ornaments and bears an artistic resemblance to the illuminated manuscripts produced in Artsakh 24 The art of carpet weaving was in addition intimately connected to the making of curtains as evidenced in a passage by Kirakos Gandzaketsi a 13th century Armenian historian from Artsakh who praised Arzu Khatun the wife of regional prince Vakhtang Khachenatsi and her daughters for their expertise and skill in weaving 25 According to ancient perceptions the carpet is the universe where according to mythological conceptions there is The sacred center The cosmic space The zone demarcating and protecting the universe 26 Azerbaijan edit Main article Azerbaijani rug The Gultapin excavations discovered several carpet weaving tools which date back to the 4th 3rd millennium BC According to Iranica Online The main weaving zone was in the eastern TransCaucasus south of the mountains that bisect the region diagonally the area now comprised in the Azerbaijan SSR it is the homeland of a Turkic population known today as Azeri Other ethnic groups also practiced weaving some of them in other parts of the Caucasus but they were of lesser importance 27 Azerbaijan was one of the most important centers of carpet weaving and as a result of that several different schools have evolved While traditionally schools are divided into four main branches each region has its own version of the carpets The Schools are divided into four main branches Kuba Shirvan Ganja Kazakh carpet weaving school The Baku carpet school Karabakh school of carpet weaving 28 Carpet weaving is a family tradition in Azerbaijan which is transferred verbally and with practicing and also associated with the daily life and customs of its people A variety of carpet and rug types are made in Azerbaijan such as silk wool gold and silver threads pile and pileless carpets as well as kilim sumakh zili verni mafrashi and khurjun In 2010 traditional art of Azerbaijani carpet weaving was added to the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity of UNESCO 29 28 China edit See also Oriental rug As opposed to most antique rug manufactory practices early Chinese carpets were woven almost exclusively for internal consumption 30 China has a long history of exporting traditional goods however it was not until the first half of the 19th century that the Chinese began to export their rugs Once in contact with western influences there was a large change in production Chinese manufactories began to produce art deco rugs with commercial look and price point The centuries old Chinese textile industry is rich in history While most antique carpets are classified according to a specific region or manufactory scholars attribute the age of any specific Chinese rug to the ruling emperor of the time The earliest surviving examples of the craft were produced during the time of Ch ung Chen the last emperor of the Chen Dynasty India edit Carpet weaving may have been introduced into the area as far back as the eleventh century with the coming of the first Muslim conquerors the Ghaznavids and the Ghauris from the West It can with more certainty be traced to the beginning of the Mughal dynasty in the early sixteenth century when the last successor of Timur Babar extended his rule from Kabul to India to found the Mughal Empire Under the patronage of the Mughals Indian craftsmen adopted Persian techniques and designs Carpets woven in the Punjab made use of motifs and decorative styles found in Mughal architecture Akbar a Mogul emperor is accredited to introducing the art of carpet weaving to India during his reign The Mughal emperors patronized Persian carpets for their royal courts and palaces During this period he brought Persian craftsmen from their homeland and established them in India Initially these Mughal carpets showed the classic Persian style of fine knotting then gradually the style blended with Indian art Thus the carpets produced became typical of Indian origin and the industry began to diversify and spread all over the subcontinent During the Mughal period carpets made on the Indian subcontinent became so famous that demand for them spread abroad These carpets had distinctive designs and boasted a high density of knots Carpets made for the Mughal emperors including Jahangir and Shah Jahan were of the finest quality Under Shah Jahan s reign Mughal carpet weaving took on a new aesthetic and entered its classical phase citation needed Indian carpets are well known for their designs with attention to detail and presentation of realistic attributes The carpet industry in India flourished more in its northern part with major centres found in Kashmir Jaipur Agra and Bhadohi Indian carpets are known for their high density of knotting Hand knotted carpets are a speciality and widely in demand in the West The carpet industry in India has been successful in establishing social business models that help underprivileged sections of the society Notable examples of social entrepreneurship ventures are Jaipur rugs 31 and the Fabindia retail chain 32 Another category of Indian rugs which though quite popular in most western countries have not received much press is hand woven rugs of Khairabad Citapore rugs citation needed Khairabad a small town in the Citapore now spelled as Sitapur district of India had been ruled by Raja Mehmoodabad Khairabad Mehmoodabad Estate was part of Oudh province which had been ruled by shi i Muslims having Persian linkages Citapore rugs made in Khairabad and neighbouring areas are hand woven and distinct from tufted and knotted rugs Flat weave is the basic weaving technique of Citapore rugs and generally cotton is the main weaving material here but jute rayon and chenille are also popular IKEA and Agocha have been major buyers of rugs from this area Iran edit Iranian carpet is derived from Persian art and culture Carpet weaving in Persia dates back to the Bronze Age The earliest surviving corpus of Persian carpets comes from the Safavid dynasty 1501 1736 in the 16th century 33 However painted depictions prove a longer history of production There is much variety among classical Persian carpets of the 16th and 17th centuries Common motifs include scrolling vine networks arabesques palmettes cloud bands medallions and overlapping geometric compartments rather than animals and humans citation needed This is because Islam the dominant religion in that part of the world forbids their depiction citation needed Still some show figures engaged either in the hunt or feasting scenes The majority of these carpets are wool but several silk examples produced in Kashan survive 34 Iran is also the world s largest producer and exporter of handmade carpets producing three quarters of the world s total output and having a share of 30 of world s export markets 35 36 The world s largest hand woven carpet was produced by Iran Carpet Company ICC at the order of the Diwan of the Royal Court of Sultanate of Oman to cover the entire floor of the main praying hall of the Sultan Qaboos Grand Mosque SQGM in Muscat 37 Pakistan edit Main article Pakistani rug The art of weaving developed in South Asia at a time when few other civilizations employed it Excavations at Harappa and Mohenjo Daro ancient cities of the Indus Valley civilization have established that the inhabitants used spindles and spun a wide variety of weaving materials Some historians consider that the Indus Valley civilization first developed the use of woven textiles As of the late 1990s hand knotted carpets were among Pakistan s leading export products and their manufacture is the second largest cottage and small industry Pakistani craftsmen have the capacity to produce any type of carpet using all the popular motifs of gulls medallions paisleys traceries and geometric designs in various combinations 38 At the time of independence manufacturing of carpets was set up in Sangla Hill a small town of District Sheikhupura Chaudary Mukhtar Ahmad Member son of Maher Ganda introduced and taught this art to locals and immigrants He is considered founder of this industry in Pakistan Sangla Hill is now a focal point of the carpet industry in Pakistan Almost all the exporters and manufacturers who are running their business at Lahore Faisalabad and Karachi have their area offices in Sangla Hill Main article Persian carpet nbsp A Tree of Life pattern nbsp The Carpet Seller Giulio Rosati Scandinavia edit Main article Scandinavian rugs Scandinavian rugs are among the most popular of all weaves in modern design Preferred by influential modernist thinkers designers and advocates for a new aesthetic in the mid twentieth century Scandinavian rugs have become very widespread in many different avenues of contemporary interior design With a long history of adaptation and evolution the tradition of Scandinavian rug making is among the most storied of all European rug making traditions Turkey edit Main article Turkish carpet nbsp Oushak Usak carpet late 19th century nbsp Kayseri prayer rug from Anatolia TurkeyTurkish carpets also known as Anatolian whether hand knotted or flat woven are among the most well known and established hand crafted art works in the world 39 Historically religious cultural environmental sociopolitical and socioeconomic conditions created widespread utilitarian need and have provided artistic inspiration among the many tribal peoples and ethnic groups in Central Asia and Turkey 40 Turks nomadic or pastoral agrarian or town dwellers living in tents or in sumptuous houses in large cities have protected themselves from the extremes of the cold weather by covering the floors and sometimes walls and doorways with carpets and rugs The carpets are always hand made of wool or sometimes cotton with occasional additions of silk These carpets are natural barriers against the cold Turkish pile rugs and kilims are also frequently used as tent decorations grain bags camel and donkey bags ground cushions oven covers sofa covers bed and cushion covers blankets curtains eating blankets table top spreads prayer rugs and for ceremonial occasions The oldest records of flat woven kilims come from Catalhoyuk Neolithic pottery circa 7000 B C One of the oldest settlements ever to have been discovered Catalhoyuk is located south east of Konya in the middle of the Anatolian region 41 The excavations to date only 3 of the town not only found carbonized fabric but also fragments of kilims painted on the walls of some of the dwellings The majority of them represent geometric and stylized forms that are similar or identical to other historical and contemporary designs 42 The knotted rug is believed to have reached Asia Minor and the Middle East with the expansion of various nomadic tribes peoples during the latter period of the great Turkic migration of the 8th and 9th centuries Famously depicted in European paintings of The Renaissance beautiful Anatolian rugs were often used from then until modern times to indicate the high economic and social status of the owner Women learn their weaving skills at an early age taking months or even years to complete the beautiful pile rugs and flat woven kilims that were created for their use in every aspect of daily life As is true in most weaving cultures traditionally and nearly exclusively it is women and girls who are both artisan and weaver 43 44 45 Turkmen edit Main article Turkmen carpet nbsp The largest hand woven carpet in the world at the Turkmen Carpet Museum in AshgabatTurkmen carpet also called Bukhara Uzbekistan is a type of handmade floor covering textile traditionally originating in Central Asia It is useful to distinguish between the original Turkmen tribal rugs and the rugs produced in large numbers for export in the 2000s mainly in Pakistan and Iran The original Turkmen rugs were produced by the Turkmen tribes who are the main ethnic group in Turkmenistan and are also found in Afghanistan and Iran They are used for various purposes including tent rugs door hangings and bags of various sizes 46 Uyghur edit Weaving was traditionally done by men in Uyghur society Scholars speculate that when the Mongols invaded northwest China in the 13th century under the leadership of General Subutai they may have taken as captives some of these skilled carpet weavers 47 Europe edit nbsp Tapestry State Gift of Honour GDR Tapestry 20 Years of the Fighting Group of the Working ClassOriental imports edit Oriental carpets began to appear in Europe after the Crusades in the 11th century due to contact by Crusaders with Eastern traders Until the mid 18th century they were mostly used on walls and tables Except in royal or ecclesiastical settings they were considered too precious to cover the floor Starting in the 13th century oriental carpets begin to appear in paintings notably from Italy Flanders England France and the Netherlands Carpets of Indo Persian design were introduced to Europe via the Dutch British and French East India Companies of the 17th and 18th century 48 and in the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth by Armenian merchants Polish carpets or Polonaise carpets 13 Spain edit nbsp The 16th century Alcaraz rug at the Nazmiyal collectionAlthough isolated instances of carpet production pre date the Muslim invasion of Spain the Hispano Moresque examples are the earliest significant body of European made carpets Documentary evidence shows production beginning in Spain as early as the 10th century AD The earliest extant Spanish carpet the so called Synagogue carpet in the Museum of Islamic Art Berlin is a unique survival dated to the 14th century The earliest group of Hispano Moresque carpets Admiral carpets also known as armorial carpets has an all over geometric repeat pattern punctuated by blazons of noble Christian Spanish families The variety of this design was analyzed most thoroughly by May Beattie Many of the 15th century Spanish carpets rely heavily on designs originally developed on the Anatolian Peninsula citation needed Carpet production continued after the Reconquest of Spain and eventual expulsion of the Muslim population in the 15th century 16th century Renaissance Spanish carpet design is a derivative of silk textile design Some of the most popular motifs are wreaths acanthus leaves and pomegranates During the Moorish Muslim period production took place in Alcaraz in the province of Albacete as well as being recorded in other towns Carpet production after the Christian reconquest continued in Alcaraz while Cuenca first recorded as a weaving centre in the 12th century became increasingly important and was dominant in the 17th and early 18th century Carpets of completely different French based designs began to be woven in a royal workshop the Royal Tapestry Factory Real Fabrica de Tapices de Santa Barbara in Madrid in the 18th century Cuenca was closed down by the royal degree of Carlos IV in the late 18th century to stop it competing with the new workshop Madrid continued as a weaving centre through to the 20th century producing brightly coloured carpets most of whose designs are strongly influenced by French carpet design and which are frequently signed on occasions with the monogram MD also sometimes with the name Stuyck and dated in the outer stripe After the Spanish Civil War General Franco revived the carpet weaving industry in workshops named after him weaving designs that are influenced by earlier Spanish carpets usually in a very limited range of colours 49 Serbia edit Main article Pirot carpet Pirot carpet a Serbian Pirotski ћilim Pirotski cilim refers to a variety of flat tapestry woven carpets or rugs traditionally produced in Pirot a town in southeastern Serbia Pirot kilims with some 122 ornaments and 96 different types have been protected by geographical indication in 2002 They are one of the most important traditional handicrafts in Serbia In the late 19th century and up to the Second World War Pirot kilims have been frequently used as insignia of Serbian and Yugoslav royalty This tradition was revived in 2011 when Pirot kilims were reintroduced for state ceremonies in Serbia Carpet weaving in Pirot dates back to the Middle Ages 50 full citation needed One of the first mentions of the Pirot kilim in written sources date to 1565 when it was said that the sajkasi boats on the Danube and Drava were covered with Pirot kilims Pirot was once the most important rug making centre in the Balkans Pirot is located on the historical main highway which linked central Europe with Constantinople Pirot was also known as Sarkoy in Turkish The Pirot carpet varieties are also found in Bulgaria and Turkey and in many other international collections One of the chief qualities are the colour effects achieved through the choice and arrangement of colours In the beginning of the 19th century plant dyes were replaced by aniline colourings The best product of the country is the Pirot carpet worth about ten shillings a square metre The designs are extremely pretty and the rugs without being so heavy as the Persian or so ragged and scant in the web and weft as Caramanian wear for ever The manufacture of these is almost entirely confined to Pirot From Pirots old Turkish signification as Sarkoy stems the traditional trade name of the rugs as Sarkoy kilims Stemming from the homonym to the today s Turkish settlement of Sarkoy in Thracia which had no established rug making tradition Sarkoys are often falsely ascribed to originate from Turkey Also in the rug selling industry Sarkoy are mostly labeled as being of oriental or Turkish origin as to easier sell them to non familiar customers as they prefer rug with putative oriental origin In fact Sarkoys have been established from the 17th century in the region of the Western Balkan or Stara Planina mountains in the towns of Pirot Berkowiza Lom Chiprovtsi and Samokow Later they have been also produced in Knjazevac and Caribrod Bulgaria edit Main article Chiprovtsi carpet The Chiprovtsi carpet Chiprovci kilim is a type of handmade carpet with two absolutely identical sides part of Bulgarian national heritage traditions arts and crafts Its name is derived from the town of Chiprovtsi where their production started in the 17th century The carpet weaving industry played a key role in the revival of Chiprovtsi in the 1720s after the devastation of the failed 1688 Chiprovtsi Uprising against Ottoman rule The western traveller Ami Boue who visited Chiprovtsi in 1836 1838 reported that mainly young girls under shelters or in corridors engage in carpet weaving They earn only five francs a month and the payment was even lower before By 1868 the annual production of carpets in Chiprovtsi had surpassed 14 000 square metres 51 full citation needed In 1896 almost 1 400 women from Chiprovtsi and the region were engaged in carpet weaving In 1920 the locals founded the Manual Labour carpet weaving cooperative society the first of its kind in the country 52 full citation needed At present the carpet kilim industry remains dominant in the town 53 Carpets have been crafted according to traditional designs but in recent years it is up to the customers to decide the pattern of the carpet they have ordered The production of a single 3 by 4 m 9 8 by 13 1 ft carpet takes about 50 days primarily women engage in carpet weaving Work is entirely manual and all used materials are natural the primary material is wool coloured using plant or mineral dyes The local carpets have been prized at exhibitions in London Paris Liege and Brussels In recent decades however the Chiprovtsi carpet industry has been in decline as it had lost its firm foreign markets As a result the town and the municipality have been experiencing a demographic crisis France edit Main article Savonnerie manufactory In 1608 Henry IV initiated the French production of Turkish style carpets under the direction of Pierre DuPont This production was soon moved to the Savonnerie factory in Chaillot just west of Paris The earliest well known group produced by the Savonnerie then under the direction of Simon Lourdet are the carpets that were produced in the early years of Louis XIV s reign They are densely ornamented with flowers sometimes in vases or baskets against dark blue or brown grounds in deep borders The designs are based on Netherlandish and Flemish textiles and paintings The most famous Savonnerie carpets are the series made for the Grande Galerie and the Galerie d Apollon in the Palais du Louvre between c 1665 1685 These 105 masterpieces made under the artistic direction of Charles Le Brun were never installed as Louis XIV moved the court to Versailles in 1688 Their design combines rich acanthus leaves architectural framing and mythological scenes inspired by Cesare Ripa s Iconologie with emblems of Louis XIV s royal power Pierre Josse Joseph Perrot is the best known of the mid eighteenth century carpet designers His many surviving works and drawings display graceful rococo s scrolls central rosettes shells acanthus leaves and floral swags The Savonnerie manufactory was moved to the Gobelins in Paris in 1826 54 The Beauvais manufactory better known for their tapestry also made knotted pile carpets from 1780 to 1792 Carpet production in small privately owned workshops in the town of Aubusson began in 1743 Carpets produced in France employ the symmetrical knot 49 nbsp An 18th century Savonnerie tapisserie at the Palace of Versailles nbsp A Savonnerie loomEngland edit nbsp Machine used to cut and re roll carpet lengthsKnotted pile carpet weaving technology probably came to England in the early 16th century with Flemish Calvinists fleeing religious persecution Because many of these weavers settled in south eastern England particularly in Norwich the 14 extant 16th and 17th century carpets are sometimes referred to as Norwich carpets These works are either adaptations of Anatolian or Indo Persian designs or employ Elizabethan Jacobean scrolling vines and blossoms all but one are dated or bear a coat of arms Like the French English weavers used the symmetrical knot There are documented and surviving examples of carpets from three 18th century manufactories Exeter 1756 1761 owned by Claude Passavant 3 extant carpets Moorfields 1752 1806 owned by Thomas Moore 5 extant and Axminster 1755 1835 owned by Thomas Whitty numerous extant Exeter and Moorfields were both staffed with renegade weavers from the French Savonnerie and therefore employ the weaving structure of that factory and Perrot inspired designs Neoclassical designer Robert Adam supplied designs for both Moorfields and Axminster carpets based on Roman floor mosaics and coffered ceilings Some of the most well known rugs of his design were made for Syon House Osterley House Harewood House Saltram House and Newby Hall Axminster carpet edit Axminster carpet was a unique floor covering first made in a factory founded at Axminster Devon in 1755 by the cloth weaver Thomas Whitty Resembling somewhat the Savonnerie carpets produced in France Axminster carpets were symmetrically knotted by hand in wool on woollen warps and had a weft of flax or hemp Like the French carpets they often featured Renaissance architectural or floral patterns others mimicked oriental patterns Similar carpets were produced at the same time in Exeter and in the Moorfields area of London and shortly before at Fulham in Middlesex The Whitty factory closed in 1835 with the advent of machine made carpeting The name Axminster however survived as a generic term for machine made carpets whose pile is produced by techniques similar to those used in making velvet or chenille 55 and Axminster Carpets Ltd resumed production at a new site in the town in 1937 56 Axminster carpets can use the three main types of broadloom carpet construction machine woven tufted and hand knotted Machine woven carpet is an investment that will last 20 or 30 years and woven Axminster and Wilton carpets are still popular in areas where longevity and design flexibility are a big part of the purchasing decision Hotels and leisure venues almost always choose these types and many homes use woven Axminsters as design statements Machine woven carpets like Axminster and Wilton are made by massive looms that weave together bobbins of carpet yarn and backing The finished result which can be intricately patterned creates a floor that provides supreme underfoot luxury with high performance Tufted carpets are also popular in the home They are relatively speedy to make a pre woven backing has yarns tufted into it Needles push the yarn through the backing which is then held in place with underlying loopers Tufted carpets can be twist pile velvet or loop pile Twist pile carpets are produced when one or more fibres are twisted in the tufting process so that in the finished carpet they appear to be bound together Velvet pile carpets tend to have a shorter pile and a tighter construction giving the finished article a smooth velvety appearance Loop pile carpets are renowned for being hard wearing and lend carpets great texture The traditional domain of rugs from faraway continents hand knotted squares and rugs use the expertise of weavers to produce work of the finest quality Traditional rugs often feature a deliberate mistake on behalf of the weaver to guarantee their authenticity Six patterns of Axminster carpet are known as the Lansdowne group These have a tripartite design with reeded circles and baskets of flowers in the central panel flanked by diamond lozenges in the side panels Axminster Rococo designs often have a brown ground and include birds copied from popular contemporary engravings Even now a large percentage of the 55 000 population of the town still seek employment in this industry Brussels and Wilton carpets edit The town of Wilton Wiltshire is also known for its carpet weaving which dates back to the 18th century 57 The Brussels loom was introduced into England towards the middle of the eighteenth century and marked the beginning of a new era in carpet weaving It was the first loom on which a pile carpet could be woven mechanically the pile consisting of rows of loops formed over wires inserted weftwise during weaving and subsequently withdrawn Brussels was the first type of carpet to be woven in a loom incorporating the Jacquard pattern selecting mechanism and in 1849 power was applied to the loom by Biglow in the United States Later when bladed wires were developed the pile loops were severed on withdrawal of the wires to produce a carpet known as Wilton and after this development the loom became known as the Wilton loom In modern usage the designation Wilton applies to both cut pile and loop pile carpets made in this loom The latter are now variously described as Brussels Wilton round wire Wilton loop pile Wilton and round wired Jacquard The methods of manufacture including the principles of design preparatory processes and weaving are the same in most respects for both Brussels and Wilton qualities The chief difference between them is that whereas Brussels loop pile is secured satisfactorily by the insertion of two picks of weft to each wire 2 shot the Wilton cut pile is woven more often with three picks of weft to each wire 3 shot to ensure that the tufts are firmly secured in the carpet backing Brussels carpets have a smooth slightly ribbed surface and their patterning is well defined a characteristic feature of the carpet Closeness of pile rather than height contributes to their neat appearance and hard wearing properties although they do not simulate the luxury of cut pile carpets Brussels Wilton carpets were initially produced on 27 inch 3 4 looms and were sewn together by hand The looms could incorporate up to five frames each with a different colour thus enabling figured or pattern carpets to be manufactured With judicial and skilful planting of colours in the frames the number of colours could be increased to about twenty enabling complex designs to be produced Due to the additional costs in labour these carpets were normally only produced for the bespoke market After the First World War the carpets started to be produced for the general market using popular designs and colourways but they always remained at the luxury end of the general market The growing middle class of the twentieth century aspired to acquire a Wilton carpet for their best room Despite the impact of industrialization the areas where Brussels Wilton carpets were produced remained centred around the towns of Wilton Kidderminster in the West Midlands and in West Yorkshire where the firm of John Crossley and Sons in Halifax became synonymous with carpet manufacture There were smaller areas of manufacture in Scotland and Durham With the development of different manufacturing methods and looms capable of the mass production of carpets the public began change their decor including carpets on a regular basis which increased the demand for carpets The last quarter of the 20th century saw the rapid decline of the labour intensive Brussels Wilton carpets Very few of the original Wilton looms still exist and the few that do are either in museums or used by small manufacturers that continue to produce custom made luxury carpets for the elite and to replace carpets in historic buildings in the UK and abroad 58 Modern carpeting and installation edit nbsp Macro shot of a Berber style carpet Berber style carpets feature two sizes of tufts of varying colors in a loop pile construction nbsp Carpet with geometric patterns on the floor in kindergarten Buryatia RussiaCarpet is commonly made in widths of 12 feet 3 7 m and 15 feet 4 6 m in the US 4 m and 5 m in Europe Where necessary different widths can be seamed together with a seaming iron and seam tape formerly it was sewn together and it is fixed to a floor over a cushioned underlay pad using nails tack strips known in the UK as gripper rods adhesives or occasionally decorative metal stair rods thus distinguishing it from rugs or mats which are loose laid floor coverings For environmental reasons the use of wool natural bindings natural padding and formaldehyde free glues is becoming more common These options are almost always at a premium cost In the UK some carpets are still manufactured for yachts hotels pubs and clubs in a narrow width of 27 inches 0 69 m and then sewn to size Carpeting which covers an entire room area is loosely referred to as wall to wall but carpet can be installed over any portion thereof with use of appropriate transition moldings where the carpet meets other types of floor coverings Carpeting is more than just a single item it is in fact a system comprising the carpet itself the carpet backing often made of latex the cushioning underlay and a method of installation Carpet tiles are also available typically 50 centimetres 20 in square These are usually only used in commercial settings and are affixed using a special pressure sensitive glue which holds them into place while allowing easy removal in an office environment for example or allowing rearrangement in order to spread wear 59 Throughout the world commercial carpet cleaning for yachts hotels pubs and clubs is also a major industry Rates for cleaning vary with hotel restaurants being on the highest end due to frequency of traffic and staining In such environments clean flooring is essential from both a pest extermination and public health liability standpoint as well as maintaining the overall look and customer satisfaction of the establishment Given the importance of upkeep it is customary in full service hotels with onsite food and beverage outlets for the commercial carpet cleaner to be extended privileges as the lord of the inn such as on the house upgraded accommodations personal chef services in room entertainment and ability to pay gratuity on hotel house accounts 60 Carpet binding is a term used for any material being applied to the edge of a carpet to make a rug Carpet binding is usually cotton or nylon but also comes in many other materials such as leather Non synthetic binding is frequently used with bamboo grass and wool rugs but is often used with carpet made from other materials The GoodWeave labelling scheme used throughout Europe and North America assures that child labour has not been used importers pay for the labels and the revenue collected is used to monitor centres of production and educate previously exploited children 61 Disposal editFor the year 2018 in the U S the recycling of carpet fiber backing and padding was 310 000 tons which was 9 2 percent of carpet generation A slightly larger proportion 17 8 percent was combusted for energy recovery while the majority of rugs and carpets were landfilled 73 percent 62 In culture and figurative expressions edit nbsp Jean Leon Gerome The Carpet MerchantThere are many stories about magic carpets legendary flying carpets that can be used to transport people who are on it instantaneously or quickly to their destination Disney s Aladdin depicts a magic carpet found by Aladdin and Abu in the Cave of Wonders while trying to find Genie s lamp Aladdin and Jasmine ride on him to go on a ride around the world The term m agic carpet is first attested in 1816 5 From the 16th century to the 19th century the term carpet was used as an adjective often with a tinge of contempt when used of men as in carpet knight 1570s which meant a man who was associated with luxury ladies boudoirs and drawing rooms 5 Rolling out the red carpet is an expression which means to welcome a guest lavishly and handsomely In some cases an actual red carpet is used for VIPs and celebrities to walk on such as at the Cannes Film Festival and when foreign dignitaries are welcomed to a country In 1820s British servant slang to carpet someone means to call them for a reprimand 5 To be called on the carpet means to be summoned for a serious reason typically a scolding reprimand this usage dates from 1900 63 referring to the carpeted office of a person in authority such as a schoolmaster or employer A stronger variant of this expression to be hauled on the carpet implies an even sterner reprimand Carpet bombing is a type of bombing from airplanes which developed in the 20th century in which an entire city is bombed rather than precise strikes on military targets The slang expression laugh at the carpet means to vomit on the floor especially a carpeted floor 64 The expression on the carpet refers to a matter which is under discussion or consideration 64 The term carpet muncher is a derogatory slang term for a lesbian this expression is first attested in 1992 65 The term carpet bag which literally refers to a suitcase made from a piece of carpet is used in several figurative contexts The term gained a popular usage after the American Civil War to refer to carpetbaggers Northerners who moved to the South after the war especially during the Reconstruction era 1865 1877 Carpetbaggers allegedly politically manipulated and controlled former Confederate states for financial and power gains In modern usage in the U S the term is sometimes used derisively to refer to a politician who runs for public office in an area where he or she does not have deep community ties or has lived only for a short time In the United Kingdom the term was adopted to refer informally to those who join a mutual organization such as a building society in order to force it to demutualize that is to convert into a joint stock company solely for personal financial gain Cutting the rug is a slang term for dancing which originated in 1942 7 The use of the term rug as an informal term for a toupee man s wig is theater slang from 1940 7 The term sweep something under the rug or sweep something under the carpet figuratively refers to situations where a person or organization is hiding something embarrassing or negative this use was first recorded in 1953 5 The figurative expression pull the rug out from under someone meaning to suddenly deprive of important support is first attested to in 1936 in American English A related figurative expression used centuries earlier was cut the grass under one s feet which is attested to in the 1580s 7 A rugrat or rug rat is a slang term for a baby or child first attested in 1968 7 The expression snug as a bug in a rug means wrapped up tight warm and comfortable 66 To lie like a rug means to tell lies shamelessly 67 The expression pull the rug out from under someone means to make someone or someone s plans fall through or to upset someone s plans 68 nbsp A mythical magic carpet nbsp The Carpet Seller a Royal Doulton figurineSee also editFloor cleaning Heatsetting William MorrisReferences edit Definition of CARPET merriam webster com Retrieved 23 June 2022 a b Cole Alan Summerly 1911 Carpet In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 5 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 392 Definition of carpet Thefreedictionary com Retrieved 4 October 2013 Carpet Definition Merriam webster com 31 August 2012 Retrieved 4 October 2013 a b c d e f g Carpet Search Online Etymology Dictionary etymonline com How It s Made Season 2 Episode 7 a b c d e f Rug Search Online Etymology Dictionary etymonline com Famed Bhadohi carpet gets GI tag The Times of India 9 September 2010 Archived from the original on 5 November 2012 The Science Of Color Enhances Carpet Style carpet rug org Archived from the original on 19 October 2015 Retrieved 28 October 2015 Heisterberg Moutsis Gudrun Heinz Rainer Wolf Thomas F Harper Dominic J James David Mazzur Richard P Kettler Volker Soine Hansgert 15 September 2001 Floor Coverings Ullmann s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry Weinheim Germany Wiley VCH Verlag GmbH amp Co KGaA doi 10 1002 14356007 a11 263 ISBN 3 527 30673 0 Sengupta Debolina Pike Ralph W 5 July 2012 Chemicals from Biomass Ingegrating Bioprocess into Chemical Production CRC Press p 95 ISBN 978 1439878149 Retrieved 27 January 2015 Chuah Hoe H 22 October 2001 Poly trimethylene terephthalate Encyclopedia of Polymer Science and Technology doi 10 1002 0471440264 pst292 ISBN 978 0471440260 a b Marcin Latka Polish carpets Archived from the original on 2 October 2018 Retrieved 2 October 2018 E J W Barber Prehistoric Textiles The Development of Cloth in the Neolithic and Bronze Ages with Special Reference to the Aegean 1992 ISBN 0 691 00224 X p 171 a b Volkmar Gantzhorn Oriental Carpets 1998 ISBN 3 8228 0545 9 The State Hermitage Museum Collection Highlights Hermitagemuseum org Archived from the original on 5 October 2013 Retrieved 4 October 2013 Ashkhunj Poghosyan On origin of Pazyryk rug Yerevan 2013 PDF pp 1 21 in Armenian pp 22 37 in English USSR conference to exchange experiences leading restorers and researchers The study preservation and restoration of ethnographic objects Theses of reports Riga 16 21 November 1987 pp 17 18 in Russian L S Gavrilenko R B Rumyanceva D N Glebovskaya Primenenie tonkoslojnoj hromotografii i elektronnoj spektroskopii dlya analiza krasitelej drevnih tkanej Issledovanie konservaciya i restavraciya etnograficheskih predmetov Tezisy dokladov SSSR Riga 1987 str 17 18 V kovre niti temno sinego i golubogo cveta okrasheny indigo po karminonosnym chervecam niti krasnogo cveta analogichnymi chervecami tipa araratskoj koshenili Ulrich Schurmann The Pazyryk Its Use and Origin Munich 1982 p 46 Archived from the original on 16 April 2013 The Nine Books of the Histories of Herodotus Thomas Gaisford Peter Laurent London 1846 CLIO I p 99 Afghan rugs sell like hot cakes Afghanembassyjp com 2 February 2008 Retrieved 26 January 2012 Internet Archive Search creator Ulrich Schurmann archive org Ulubabyan Bagrat A 1975 Խաչենի իշխանությունը X XVI դարերում The Principality of Khachen From the 10th to 16th Centuries in Armenian Yerevan Armenian SSR Armenian Academy of Sciences p 267 a b c Hakobyan Medieval Art of Artsakh p 84 in Armenian Kirakos Gandzaketsi Պատմություն Հայոց History of Armenia Yerevan Armenian SSR Armenian Academy of Sciences 1961 p 216 as cited in Hakobyan Medieval Art of Artsakh p 84 note 18 Ավանեսյան Լիլիա 2020 Հայկական գորգերի զարդաձևերի ծագումնաբանությունն ու իմաստաբանությունը Երևան Հայաստանի պատմության թանգարան ISBN 978 9939 9227 3 7 Foundation Encyclopedia Iranica Welcome to Encyclopedia Iranica iranicaonline org a b Traditional art of Azerbaijani carpet weaving in the Republic of Azerbaijan unesco preslib az Retrieved 18 September 2019 UNESCO Traditional art of Azerbaijani carpet weaving in the Republic of Azerbaijan ich unesco org Retrieved 18 September 2019 Eiland Murray L 2003 Carpets of the Ming Dynasty East and West 53 1 4 179 208 ISSN 0012 8376 JSTOR 29757577 A Case of Social Entrepreneurship Chillibreeze com Archived from the original on 4 October 2013 Retrieved 4 October 2013 Handloom weavers shareholders fabric suppliers The Times of India 6 May 2008 Eiland Murray 2000 Scholarship and a Controversial Group of Safavid Carpets Iran 38 The British Institute of Persian Studies Pope Arthur Upham A Survey of Persian Art from Prehistoric Times to the Present Vol XI Carpets Chapter 55 New York Oxford University Press 1938 9 Kohan Textile Journal Asian Carpet Analysis Archived from the original on 13 July 2011 Retrieved 22 December 2010 Khalaj Mehrnosh 10 February 2010 Iran s oldest craft left behind FT com Retrieved 4 October 2013 The largest hand made carpet in history JOZAN 10 May 2004 Retrieved 13 September 2022 Stone Peter F The Oriental Rug Lexicon Seattle University of Washington Press 1997 The Brukenthal Museum The extraordinary value of the Anatolian Carpet Brukenthalmuseum ro Archived from the original on 9 March 2012 Retrieved 26 January 2012 The historical importance of rug and carpet weaving in Anatolia Turkishculture org Retrieved 26 January 2012 Catalhoyuk com Ancient Civilization and Excavation Catalhoyuk com Archived from the original on 1 January 2016 Retrieved 26 January 2012 Ancient Kilim Evidence Findings in Catalhoyuk Turkishculture org Retrieved 26 January 2012 The Dominant role of Turkish Women and Girls in Turkish carpet weaving Turkishculture org Retrieved 26 January 2012 Geissler C A Brun T A Mirbagheri I Soheli A Naghibi A Hedayat H 1981 The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition The Role of Women and Girls in traditional rug and carpet weaving PDF The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 34 12 2776 2783 doi 10 1093 ajcn 34 12 2776 PMID 7315779 Retrieved 26 January 2012 Aslanapa Oktay One Thousand Years of Turkish Carpets Translated and edited by William A Edmonds Istanbul Eren 1988 Living legend Archived 12 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine The president of Turkmenistan Gurbanguly Berdymukhamedov book about Turkmen rug Gonick Gloria Early Carpets and Tapestries on the Eastern Silk Road ACC Art Books p 51 Dimand Maurice Sven and Jean Mailey Oriental Rugs in the Metropolitan Museum of Art New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art 1973 a b Sherrill Sarah B Carpets and Rugs of Europe and America New York Abbeville Press 1996 LEPOTA TRAJANJA Kostova p 20 Kostova pp 20 22 Dimitrova Milka 25 May 2005 Chiprovskite kilimi zapazena marka na kilimarskiya biznes v Blgariya in Bulgarian BNR Radio Blgariya Retrieved 19 September 2008 permanent dead link french Jean Coural Les Gobelins Nouvelles Editions Latines 1989 p 47 Axminster carpet Encyclopaedia Britannica Britannica com Retrieved 4 October 2013 Axminster Carpets collapses into administration BBC News 19 February 2020 Retrieved 20 January 2021 Morris Shirley 28 June 2007 Interior Decoration A Complete Source Global Media ISBN 9788189940652 Retrieved 14 November 2011 Carpets by George Robinson F T I F S D C published 1966 Chap 7 Wilton Carpets page 72 Fletcher Alan J The Complete Carpet Buying Guide Portland Oregon AJ Books 2006 Schrock Jay 2010 Financial and Managerial Accounting in Hotels About the GoodWeave label Goodweave org Retrieved 26 January 2012 EPA 7 September 2017 Durable Goods Product Specific Data Carpets and Rugs Retrieved 27 May 2021 carpet Search Online Etymology Dictionary www etymonline com a b carpet via The Free Dictionary Carpet muncher Dictionary com Archived from the original on 28 July 2016 Retrieved 28 December 2018 snug as a bug in a rug TheFreeDictionary com lie like a rug TheFreeDictionary com pull the rug out TheFreeDictionary com Further reading editCarpet at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Travel information from Wikivoyage Walker Daniel 1997 Flowers Underfoot Indian Carpets of the Mughal Era New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 0810965100 OCLC 893698548 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carpet amp oldid 1191762493, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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