Dear Turkotekians,
Here's another pair of Turkmen chuvals I've acquired lately. They too come from the estate of a late Finnish diplomat, stationed in Iran and Pakistan in the 1980s (cf. my posting
http://www.turkotek.com/VB56/forum/m...urkmen-chuvals).
To me, these look like Yomud work, although the elem is not very typical(?). Both chuvals are circa 140 x 115 cm (with back panel), or 65 x 115 (front panel). Only five colors have been used: red, white, medium brown, very dark brown, and light yellowish brown (presumably all are non-synthetic). No blue has been used.
The pile is practically intact, and I detect no corrosion in the browns. Still, the chuvals seem to have some age.
Interestingly, the other chuval has an inscription using Arabic script. I showed it to some colleagues who are fluent in various Arabic dialects. They said it's not Arabic, but presumably Turkmen written with Arabic alphabet. That would, of course, place the rugs outside the Soviet Union where Turkmen was written with Cyrillic script.
Any ideas re the age and origin of the pair? (Chuck Wagner mentioned the Yomud in Gonbad-e Kavus region in NE Iran as a possible source for the other chuval pair I posted last fall.)
Best,
Mikko
Here's another pair of Turkmen chuvals I've acquired lately. They too come from the estate of a late Finnish diplomat, stationed in Iran and Pakistan in the 1980s (cf. my posting
http://www.turkotek.com/VB56/forum/m...urkmen-chuvals).
To me, these look like Yomud work, although the elem is not very typical(?). Both chuvals are circa 140 x 115 cm (with back panel), or 65 x 115 (front panel). Only five colors have been used: red, white, medium brown, very dark brown, and light yellowish brown (presumably all are non-synthetic). No blue has been used.
The pile is practically intact, and I detect no corrosion in the browns. Still, the chuvals seem to have some age.
Interestingly, the other chuval has an inscription using Arabic script. I showed it to some colleagues who are fluent in various Arabic dialects. They said it's not Arabic, but presumably Turkmen written with Arabic alphabet. That would, of course, place the rugs outside the Soviet Union where Turkmen was written with Cyrillic script.
Any ideas re the age and origin of the pair? (Chuck Wagner mentioned the Yomud in Gonbad-e Kavus region in NE Iran as a possible source for the other chuval pair I posted last fall.)
Best,
Mikko
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