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Here is a piece that I have been unable to classify. It would seem to be of Turkmen origin and possibly a prayer rug fragment. Note the remnants of rams horns at top. Of course I have no idea how the top and bottom were finished. The selvedges appear original. The knotting is asymmetrical open to the right. Included is a photo of the back which shows the weft and some ridging of the warps. The field appears to be a version of the ayna gul. Any thoughts would be appreciated.
I'm not an expert, but this looks to be a Middle Amu Darya weaving, aka "Ersari," with some age. The pale yellow strikes me as something indicating Ersari weaving from before 1890-ish, and the back looks old. I agree that it looks like a fragment of a prayer rug. Cool piece!
Joe, I bought this piece on eBay more than a month ago from a seller in turkey. I don’t know why they are still showing it. As to attribution I don’t generally rely on sellers info.
I finally found what it is down to the identical measurement of the width. Do you have a copy of the book
”Carpets of the People of Central Asia” by VG Moshkova? Page 286. Shows a similar example.
The book says it’s a Kizyl Ayak lattice group rug.
Ironically the aina gochak gol is traditionally used on Chuvals, Torbas and mafrashes according to the book.
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