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MAKING
CARPETS
Weaving
The weaving was traditionally carried out by the women and
girls of the family, when they were not busy with other tasks.
Thus it mainly took place in late summer, when the ewes give
little milk, or in the winter, before lambing time. The wool
used for weaving the rugs, called yapag, was the winter wool,
which is shorn in the spring.
Wool-Dyeing
The dyeing of the wool - a women's task - was carried out in
the fall. Until the 19th century, only natural dyes were used,
derived from plants, animals, and minerals. Most of the plants
that were used for making dyes were gathered in the fields;
others were purchased at the local bazaars. Red dye was
produced from madder root and cochineal, yellow from daphne,
euphorbium, buckthorn, dyer's sumach, and daisy, and brown and
black from galls and nut husks. Blue dye was made from indigo
imported from India. The wool was boiled together with the
desired plant dyes and various mordants. Today, most of the
weavers use chemical dyes, which are cheaper and more
convenient
Warps are the parallel strings stretched from
loom beam to loom beam upon which rows of knots are tied. Most
weavers use cotton for warp material if it is available
because it is easier to weave a flat, straight rug on cotton
warps than on wool warps (wool yarn is more elastic than
cotton string, and is more affected by changes in humidity).
Weavers who are semi-nomadic pastoralists (i.e. not farmers)
are much more likely to use wool than cotton for warp and
weft.
Wefts run across the width of the rug, over and
under the warp strings and between rows of knots. Most often
wefts are made of cotton, wool, or silk . Wefts help hold rows
of knots in place and strengthen the structure of the rug.
Knots are tied by looping yarn around pairs of
warps and cutting off the standing end. The ends of the "knot"
become the pile or nap of the rug.
Edge bindings are made by wrapping several warps
at the edge of the rug with yarn to reinforce this part of the
rug.
End finishes hold knots and wefts from working off the rug's
warp strings. Many rug types have a flat-woven kilim selvedge
at both ends.
Fringes are formed by gathering and knotting
together bundles of warp strings at both ends of the rug after
the rug has been cut from the loom. The knots in these bundles
of warp strings keep pile knots and end finishes tight at the
rug's ends.

The Parts of a Rug Design ....
The field is the background of the rug inside the
borders.
The main border is the widest decorative design around
the outside of the rug; guard borders are the narrow
decorative designs flanking the main border.
The medallion is the round, oval, or polygonal design
element that sometimes occupies the center of the field.
Corner brackets or spandrels are designs which
sometimes fill the corners of the field.

The Parts of a Rug Loom ....
Most weavers work on fixed, vertical looms (although some
semi-nomadic weavers in areas of Afghanistan, Turkey, and Iran
still use the more portable horizontal ground loom). A simple
vertical loom is little more than a sturdy frame, usually made
of wooden timbers, designed to hold taut the warp strings upon
which the weaver ties rows of knots. A heddle is used to
separate alternate warps so that the shuttle carrying the weft
string can be passed between warps from one side of the rug to
the other. More sophisticated vertical looms have their upper
and lower beams constructed as rollers. A roller loom lets the
weaver roll the completed part of a rug under and to the back
of the loom, allowing the construction of a longer carpet on a
loom of the same vertical size.
Weavers' Tools ...
Most
weavers work with a hooked knife, or gollab in one hand (top
tool in photo). A weaver uses a finger to push the yarn
through the warps, then uses the hook on the knife to catch
the yarn behind the warps and pull it to the face of the rug.
After the knot is tied the weaver cuts the yarn with a flick
of the blade. After several rows of knots are tied across the
width of the loom, the weaver uses a comb or beater (middle
tool in photo) made of metal or wood to beat down the warps
and rows of knots to consolidate the weave. After a strip of
pile an inch or so wide is woven across the width of the loom,
the weaver uses scissors to clip the nap back to nearly its
final heigth. The scissors have handles bent so that the
blades can cut flush with the face of the rug. Like the knife
and comb, the scissors are made by the blacksmith down the
street in the village: when they get dull, a boy runs them
back for sharpening.
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