Carpets and Rugs
History
of Making Carpets and Rugs
Overview:
Carpets and rugs were once
reserved for royalty, kings, chieftains, and other
people of high honor. Rugs were used as awnings
over thrones of the ancient Assyrian kings and
Persian emperors. European kings spread carpets in
front of thrones which provided a barrier from
nobles. Fine
rugs were often displayed in front of church
altars.
There really is no difference between rugs and
carpets. The use of either was a sign of importance
in antiquity. In modern language we refer to a
scolding as being called on the carpet as an old
expression from long ago when a carpet marked the
place of people who had authority. Today most
homes use carpets and rugs in different ways; to
protect flooring, to add color to a room, or for
wall decorations.
A Brief History of Making Carpets and Rugs:
Weaving was one of the first arts that came to
primitive man. The technique of weaving may have
come from early civilization noticing how the roots
of trees were intertwined and got the idea to weave
baskets. Animal hair was made into felt by wetting
and pounding them with a stone. Vines and grasses
were braided and weaved together to form rope, and
reeds were made into straw mats and grass rugs.
The Eskimos made mats from similar material as did
the American Indians. They wove them from rushes
and from a twine made of twisted nettle bark. In
the Pacific Islands, the natives used rattan in a
similar way.
Later the hair of some animals were twisted or spun
into a strong woolen thread and hairy plants were
spun into cotton, linen and other types of threads.
Soon after the loom was invented to weave these
threads.
The Navajo Indians and some weavers of the Middle
East still use this early primitive loom for making
blankets and rugs. A row of many threads stretched
up and down is called the warp. Another thread
called the weft, or woof, moves across these in and
out, over one and under the next, left to right,
then back again, right to left, building a flat
cloth row by row.
The weave can be fine and thin or thick enough for
a strong rug. This is called the basket weave. The
completed fabric may be made livelier by adding
stripes or simple patterns by using threads of
different colors. Rugs made this way are often done
in complicated patterns and are referred to as
tapestry rugs.
A much finer weave is called a pile carpet. It is
woven by winding little knots of thread upon pairs
of warp threads, clear across the rug and clipping
the ends of each knot. Row after row of these short
tufts made a velvety surface, or pile, sometimes
coarse and shaggy, sometimes finished smooth, and
with many colored patterns.
In Sweden the word rug simply meant “entangled
hair”. Romans had rugs of felt with embroidered
designs and the Chinese made them more than one
thousand years ago. In modern time small rugs of
felt with colored flower embroidery are still made
in India.
The home of the pile carpet was Turkestan, in the
heart of Asia. Nomad tribes still live in this
large lonely land north of Iran, Pakistan, and
India and they still make carpets and rugs in the
traditional hand weaving way. While men tend the
flocks, women weave all the carpets. Sheep wool
makes the finest carpets. They also use the hair of
the goats and camels. They use mainly dyes made
from plants for their rich colors.
The ancient tribal carpet making industry of Iran
was just about decimated during the Iranian and
Iraq war of the last century. Many of the tribes
migrated to Turkey where they still continue to
make beautiful carpets and rugs.
Through many centuries the nomads of the world have
spread their art over the all the continents, from
China to Turkey and Persia, and to the west.
Different cultures learned to make finer carpets in
very elegant designs.
In modern time we use these carpets and rugs to
decorate our homes as floor covering, accent
carpets, and wall decoration and from time to time
we still get "called on the carpet".
Related articles:
Area Rugs and Carpets
Carper Tiles
How to Hang a Carpet
Using rug Runners
Wood
Flooring Versus Carpeting