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The Weavers
Special Thanks to Dr. Khosrow
Sobhe who has been a leader in the return to natural dyed
Persian rugs. His efforts to encourage natural dyes, native wool, and
tribal patterns have been essential in the revival of the Iranian
carpet industry. Dr. Sobhe was kind enough to loan me these images of
the production of his rugs.
See also Guide
To Gabbeh Rugs - the Wool, the Yarn, the Dyes
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In Iran almost all rugs are woven by women. As a father
of three young children I always love to see the happy healthy smiling
children like the one above watching her mother weave. In the old days
before the revolution children wove rugs. Since the fall of the Shah
child labor is no longer an issue. In Iran school attendance is
mandatory until the children are in high school. A little girl growing
up in Iran has more opportunity than any time in history. Over 60
percent of students in University are women. At that rate rugs like
these may soon be a thing of the past.
Reports published by the US Department of Labor confirm
that Child Labor is not an issue in most of the rug producing countries
including Iran. The big problem areas for child labor and even child
slave labor are India and Pakistan. In Iran woman weave and children
study. Weaving becomes a way for women to get a better way of life
while still living in her home village. Woman can balance the need to
earn a living while still managing a family. Dr. Khosrow
Sobhe tells a story of when he and one of his brothers
visited a weaver who works with them. The woman's high school age son
was sporting a new chambray shirt which was all the rage in Iran at
that time. When they left Khosrow pointed out to his brother that the
weavers son was better dressed than either of them. Sometimes the
woman's income is all the family has and other times it is the way to a
better life and a few luxuries for the children.

Better looms make it possible to produce better rugs.
The metal looms that these Qashqai women use are a vast improvement
over the old looms. Please note the thickness of the Gabbeh. These rugs
are normally the thickest rug produced in Iran and are a joy to walk
upon.

The large weavers comb is used to keep the wefts
straight. The colors are all natural dyes. Many people claim this but I
know it is true with Sobhe rugs because the wool is dyed by my friends
at Sayahi Dye Works in Shiraz Abbas and
Parham Sayahi.

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Qashqai women are more casual in the dress that
one might expect to see in the mosques of Qum. Directly after the
revolution things could get tense over veils for woman and the Khosrow
Khan hats that the Qashqai men wear. Now things go easier.
Dr.Lois Beck of Washington University Saint Louis
told me that after the revolution the men were forbidden to wear the
Khosrow Khan hats. The women then began to weave into their rugs the
image of the hats but they would disguise them so they could see them
but the Revolutionary Guards could not. I noticed on a recent trip to
Iran that the Khosrow Khan hats and the traditional Qashqai women's
clothes are welcomed everywhere even at official government functions.
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I mentioned above that women do
the weaving. Look in the background of this image. Men wash the rugs
and shear them.
Internet Resources for Gabbeh Rugs
Persian Rugs and Carpets
Gabbeh Flooring Rugidea.com Los Angeles California Sobcoweb.com
Gabbayeh
(Gabbeh) Rugs from Iran
www.PersianCarpetGuide.com
Copyright
Barry O'Connell 2004 - 2009.
Last revised:
March 30, 2009.
a
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