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Baluch
Prayer Rug Persia last quarter 19th C Lot 142
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Chequer-board Selvage
Afghan Rugs
What we know about this group is that they are
from West Afghanistan. In the description of Lot 142 the team of Barrett
and Bennett wrote. "The chequer-board
selvage is characteristic of weaving from the
Adraskand Valley of west Afghanistan." They
attributed the rug to the Baluchi or Timuri. In
the years when I wrote more about Baluch rugs I
attributed this group to the Taimani of the
Chahar Aymaq. The bottom border with white and
stars is one I connect with a Taimani
attribution.
I came across a structural analyses of a
Chequer-board Selvage Rug that I did a number of
years ago:
Warp: Mostly light wool with
some dark and some mixed. 2 stranded Z spun S
plied. Flat warps.
Warp fibers: Up to 3 and ¾ inch
long. The wool fibers are thin and there is no
hair.
Wefts: Various colors and use of
both wool and cotton. Double wefted with frequent
use of different colors together, i.e. one shoot
maroon and the other in green. Both wefts are
sinuous giving the rug a flat foundation.
Knots: 8 across and 7 down. 56
kpsi, 896 per Sq. DM. Asymmetrical open to the
left.
Pile: Extensive use of different
colored yarn plied into one knot, i.e. green and
brown mixed to create a shade in a field.
Pile Depth: 12/32nds inch deep.
Ends: 3-inch sumac skirt with a
decorative supplementary fringe.
Selvedge: Orange and blue wool
in a checkerboard pattern over 4 cords.
Size: Not available at
publication time
Colors: Red, blue, brown,
maroon, orange, green, black, and white
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