Some months ago I purchased this to me at least somewhat unusual small rug on Ebay from a Swiss seller:
Here is the seller's description:
"O ANTIQUE FINE 19 CENTURY TURKMEN WITH SILK HIGHLIGHTS 7.8 x 34.6 in O
ORIGINAL VINTAGE ANTIQUE 19 CENTURY TRIBAL ARTWORK
ALL WOOL WITH SILK PARTS
20xX88CM or 7.8x34.6 in
ALL ORGANIC VEGETABLE COLORS
A COMPLETE BOTTOM PANEL FRAGMENT
RARE POWERFUL DESIGN AND COLOR COMBINATION
HIGH GRADE COLLECTORS QUALITY
SWISS ESTATE FIND"
Having no idea what this really was, I hectically started searching through my Turkoman books and found this picture in Siawosch Azadi's Turkoman Carpets (The Crosby Press, 1975):
s:
There it is, a "complete bottom panel fragment" for sure. Here is Azadi's description of the piece in his book:
"34 Salor ak chuval
1.14 x 0.78 Second half 19th century Private collection, Hamburg
The principle of the decoration of such pieces is expressed in alternating horizontal strips of undecorated kelim weave and decorated piled areas. The lower elem panel has a knotted white ground, usually of cotton, hence the name ak- or white- chuval. The twelve strips carry six design variants: kbamtos, kurbaghe, dyrnak-kotshak or durli-kotshak, tsbarkb-falak, and at the bottom, kelle or kelleli-gul.
Warp: wool, s-plied, 2 strands, undyed, light ivory, 90 threads per 10cm.
Weft: wool, z-plied, 2 strands, not twisted, dyed, red and dark blue; cotton, z-plied, 2 strands, not twisted, undyed, white. 1 shoot tightly introduced. Lower white ground portion has one weft after every 2 rows of knots but not offset. 1 weft after every row in the stripes. 220 weft threads per 10cm.
Pile: wool, z-plied, 2 strands, not twisted; cotton, z-plied, 4 strands, not twisted, undyed, white, knots As4, count 100-120 x 45 = ca. 4,500-5,500 knots per dm2, height 2cm. Handle: velvety, thin, fine grained.
Upper end: white cotton kelim, turned over and sewn on. 2 red-green strips. Goat hair braiding sewn on at the edge.
Lower end: white cotton kelim, cut. Selvedge: round, wool or cotton.
Colours: seven: mid-red, blue-red, brown-red, dark brown, green-black, blue-black, white."
What do you think? Has Azadi solved my small mystery? Are these "elems" rare? I for one have never seen one like this one before as far as I can remember and Azadi's picture is the only illustration of one I have been able to find.
Here is the seller's description:
"O ANTIQUE FINE 19 CENTURY TURKMEN WITH SILK HIGHLIGHTS 7.8 x 34.6 in O
ORIGINAL VINTAGE ANTIQUE 19 CENTURY TRIBAL ARTWORK
ALL WOOL WITH SILK PARTS
20xX88CM or 7.8x34.6 in
ALL ORGANIC VEGETABLE COLORS
A COMPLETE BOTTOM PANEL FRAGMENT
RARE POWERFUL DESIGN AND COLOR COMBINATION
HIGH GRADE COLLECTORS QUALITY
SWISS ESTATE FIND"
Having no idea what this really was, I hectically started searching through my Turkoman books and found this picture in Siawosch Azadi's Turkoman Carpets (The Crosby Press, 1975):
s:
There it is, a "complete bottom panel fragment" for sure. Here is Azadi's description of the piece in his book:
"34 Salor ak chuval
1.14 x 0.78 Second half 19th century Private collection, Hamburg
The principle of the decoration of such pieces is expressed in alternating horizontal strips of undecorated kelim weave and decorated piled areas. The lower elem panel has a knotted white ground, usually of cotton, hence the name ak- or white- chuval. The twelve strips carry six design variants: kbamtos, kurbaghe, dyrnak-kotshak or durli-kotshak, tsbarkb-falak, and at the bottom, kelle or kelleli-gul.
Warp: wool, s-plied, 2 strands, undyed, light ivory, 90 threads per 10cm.
Weft: wool, z-plied, 2 strands, not twisted, dyed, red and dark blue; cotton, z-plied, 2 strands, not twisted, undyed, white. 1 shoot tightly introduced. Lower white ground portion has one weft after every 2 rows of knots but not offset. 1 weft after every row in the stripes. 220 weft threads per 10cm.
Pile: wool, z-plied, 2 strands, not twisted; cotton, z-plied, 4 strands, not twisted, undyed, white, knots As4, count 100-120 x 45 = ca. 4,500-5,500 knots per dm2, height 2cm. Handle: velvety, thin, fine grained.
Upper end: white cotton kelim, turned over and sewn on. 2 red-green strips. Goat hair braiding sewn on at the edge.
Lower end: white cotton kelim, cut. Selvedge: round, wool or cotton.
Colours: seven: mid-red, blue-red, brown-red, dark brown, green-black, blue-black, white."
What do you think? Has Azadi solved my small mystery? Are these "elems" rare? I for one have never seen one like this one before as far as I can remember and Azadi's picture is the only illustration of one I have been able to find.
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