If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
The TurKoTek Home Page can be accessed by clicking the link, or on the image on the top of the page on the left side. From there (or from the link here), you can access our Archived Salons and Selected Discussions. Our forums are easy to use, and you are welcome to read and post messages without registering. However, registration will enable a number of features that make the software more flexible and convenient for you, and you need not provide any information except your name (which is required even if you post without being registered) and a working email address. Please use your full name. We do not permit posting anonymously or under a pseudonym, ad hominem remarks, commercial promotion, comments bearing on the value of any item or on the reputation of any seller.
What is the very narrow 'strip' along the edge of this carpet actually called? I assume it is added after the rug is made for............................'strengthening' the selvedge's?
Opps, connection keeps dropping out during photo upload saying “You have been logged out due to inactivity.” I mean we are talking of maybe five seconds of inactivity! Tried numerous times and each time same. Will log in again later and try again. Pardon.
Photo. (Just would not attach to original post - even after logging out and in several times - without 'dropping out'.)
Just to be clear, the edging I am specifically asking about (in the image with the arrows) seems to have been woven separately and then just 'stitched / sewn on', (whereas the edging I am more familiar within as shown in the other photo is actually woven in.
So, in a lot of tribal and village weavings, the selvage is consructed using extra side warps with the weft used for the wrapping yarn. But there are many notable exceptions: the Qashqai barber-pole wrap, the Kurdish banded wrap, etc. On city rugs, especially Qom and Kashan silk pieces, the side warps are used but a separate silk yarn is used to wrap them for a thin tight selvage.
It is very common to find replacement selvage that was added after the original was worn through or torn. And yes, it is usually stitched on. A quick job is easy to spot but if the repair person was taking their time and trying to keep the original look, it can be hard to spot the stitching. I haven't heard of a separate tand specific erm for such work, other than self-explanatory "replacement salvage".
If anyone has done a more detailed classification it would probably be Marla Mallett, and would be in her book: Woven Structures. I'll take a look in my copy; if you don't have one I'd recommend getting one. It is superb.
Comment