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Searching and Shopping for Fine Antique Area Rugs Online
Shopping for fine antique carpets or decorative rugs online should be easy. This is a no-brainer for internet savvy shoppers, but not all rug dealers make finding the perfect antique Oriental rugs easy. Searching and finding that one special rug, the antique carpet that can capture hearts, is possible!
Extraordinary fine antique rugs and textiles are within reach. Nazmiyal Collection presents the complete world of antique or semi-antique rugs to shoppers in one location. The best of the best from the most renowned weaving centres are all represented in this unprecedented collection which could be viewed in person or searched online.
Rugs from the 17th century are displayed alongside modern shag carpets and rugs from the 20th century. Now, 400 years of textile history are accessible anywhere, anytime. Having such a broad selection of fine rugs at your fingertips opens a world of design possibilities.
Find and Shop for Rugs Online by Size, Shape, Style and Origin
The search for antique carpets is an adventure in culture and world history. There are so many historic and modern carpets available that narrowing down the scope and finding the piece that fits one’s sense of style can be a serious quest.
Sifting through an immense catalogue of unique pieces is a challenge, even for the most experienced collector. That is why Nazmiyal Collection has invested in technologies and tools that simplify the process and make it easier for everyone to find the perfect rug.
These tools allow shoppers to search rugs by style, pattern, colour, origin or size. Like in any good taxonomy and indexing system, these fine rugs can be sorted by their country of origin, regional designation and many other traits. Shoppers can even request personal assistance with locating regional rugs or carpets of a specific size or shape. Technology and a cross-referenced carpet catalogue have made it easier than ever to search rugs and to find the best antique carpet.
What to Consider When Looking for an Antique Rug
Are you looking to buy rugs? Well, if you are, the chances are that you have some questions — and that is just what we are here for! After all, choosing the right antique rug for you and for your home can be a challenge – there are practically countless styles of antique rugs on the market today, not to mention a huge range in quality, size and origin.
But do not worry – while there may be a tremendous variety of different types of rugs available to you, not all of them will be especially well suited to your personal needs.
Considerations such as, ‘what’s my budget?’ or ‘do I want to buy a modern rug or an antique rug‘ or ‘would I be better served by a more durable rug than a thinner flat weave rug, like a kilim?’ are just a couple of examples of the sorts of thing that you should bear in mind on your quest to find yourself the perfect rug. Once these considerations are addressed, the choice becomes much more focused and selective and much simpler.
The initial processes that you might find yourself going through when deciding to purchase new antique area rugs may seem daunting, but don’t worry — things will get easier (and more fun!) once the shopping begins! Remember, our site is a great resource for information when you have decided that it is time to start looking for a rug!
Antique Area Rugs And Home Decor
Antique Area rugs are an indispensable interior design accessory. Grand rooms and private spaces can both benefit from the addition of a stylish old area rug. The soft textures, balanced proportions and carefully selected colours are the secret ingredients that can tie any interior design together.
From luxurious traditional area rugs, to artful contemporary carpets, a fabulous rug can function as a show-stopping conversation piece.
Area rugs are available in every size, shape, style and colour palette imaginable. Designers and do-it-yourselfers only need to jump in to experience the tremendous variety and stylistic breadth of contemporary and traditional area rugs.
The Roots Of Antique Rug History
The start of the weaving industry began with the domestication of animals. People used their wool that they sheared. They did not have to kill them, just shear them on a regular basis. Thus, they continued to produce wool for weaving needs. Antique area rugs are just another facet of our evolution.
What did people do before they started weaving rugs?
They killed animals and used their hides. They used them for warmth and floor coverings. Whatever the skins looked like was what floor coverings looked like.
Once people began to dye the wool, the commercial weaving of antique rugs began. They produced a more colourful product and used artistic talents to design them. First, they wove rugs for personal use.
Then it became an industry. This industry continues in much the same fashion even today. The term “antique rug” refers to rugs that are at least eighty years old. Limited in numbers, antique rugs will become rarer.
20th Century Area Rugs
The twentieth century ushered in the industrial era. From this point on, the economy became more global. This resulted in more Western influences in the Middle East. During this period, the uniqueness of the antique rugs began to wane.
During the early 20th century, economic instability began to set in. Productions became more commercial. They also became less expensive (and as a result, far less appealing). This resulted in the degradation of the rug production throughout. Designs, colours, overall quality and appeal all took a back seat.
The manufacturers just looked for lower costs. True antique rugs pre-date, for the most part, the advent of mass production. A little-known fact that I would like to talk about is price. Despite the difference in quality between the antiques and new, many older area rugs might be less expensive than the new ones. The antiques have unique assets compared to their newer counterparts.
For instance, antique rugs with hand-spun wool and natural dyes, have a more luminous surface. New area rugs will never have the patina as the antiques. New rugs have no intrinsic value. Therefore, antique rugs, are decorative items and solid investments. Quality and imperfections are more subjective aspects for judging antique rugs.
Some buyers of antique rugs might be less inclined to acquire area rugs that are not extremely fine. These quality driven antique rug buyers would more than likely gravitate towards the workshop city rugs. For the most part, these city production area rugs will generally be perfectly straight and the colours and design are consistent throughout. Others might appreciate the personality of village rugs.
Village weavers confront us every time they insert a willful twist, a change of colour or pattern. Therefore, the weaver is alive in the antique rugs that they created.
An Introduction to the World of Antique Carpets and Rugs:
The Origin and Evolution of Antique Area Rugs Throughout History
The history of antique carpets and rug weaving is complex and fraught with lingering scholarly questions. While the recent history of artisanal rug weaving is well documented and while certain areas have kept reliable historical records, there is in fact little consensus regarding the genesis of the craft.
Most people would not be comfortable making an educated guess as to the origins of rug production. That said, it is certainly true that most people in the Western world associate the earliest antique rugs with the part of the world that we describe as the Near East. Indeed, rug weaving has been an important cultural practice in many Near Eastern countries for centuries. However, the academic general consensus, while far from unanimous, suggests that this region was not the rugs’ birthplace, despite its long history of rug production.
In fact, the incomplete historical record of rugs does show us that rug weaving was a practice that was independently developed by a myriad of peoples across the world. The record becomes especially shoddy when it comes to the history of knotted or pile rugs. While it is an established historical fact that the urban centres of the great Near Eastern empires were the commercial centres of rug production throughout the Medieval Era, it is practically just as well established that these places were not the first to weave knotted or pile rugs. To find out more about the genesis of the knotted carpet, one must venture into prehistory, when most of mankind lived a nomadic existence.
In their most basic form, rugs function today much as animal hides and skins functioned for our nomadic ancestors. While nomadic people used animal skins for a variety of functions for centuries, it is relatively unclear precisely when people began to sheer the fur and wool from certain animals to use in weaving.
Naturally, the advantages of sheering over killing an animal are enormous. A dead animal yields a very finite amount of hide while a living animal that was sheared, offers a practically limitless supply of material. This simple but immeasurably important development in the history of human evolution would have naturally resulted in our nomadic ancestors finding themselves with more resources than they were accustomed to having. As such, these nomadic peoples were now able to experiment with wool and other similar materials in ways that were previously unimaginable.
Dyeing Wool For Rugs
The relatively bright wool given by sheep was well suited for dyeing. That is precisely what the earliest rug makers did. Plant materials, insects and a variety of other natural materials were all used to extract colour. These colours were then applied to the wool to create the first rugs with patterns and culturally significant symbols.
While this general idea is understood to be the most likely explanation for the earliest antique area rugs, it remains unclear where precisely this development would have first taken place. It is exceedingly unlikely that this would have happened in the Near East before it happened elsewhere; after all, early, nomadic humans were subject to their environment in a way that it is difficult for modern people to fully imagine. Therefore, it is unlikely that those living in the relatively warm region of the Near East would have seen the need to develop this technology. Meanwhile, there is some evidence in the archaeological record to suggest that the earliest pile rugs may have been woven further to the east… considerably further.
The Birth Place of Pile Area Rugs and the Story of the Pazyryk Carpet
It is the High Altai Mountains of Siberia, in modern day east-central Russia, that seems to be the most likely birthplace of the pile carpet. The earliest human inhabitants of this area were in fact nomadic. Unlike their cousins in the Near East, these people had a vested interest in developing new methods for keeping warm. Over time, the peoples of the High Altai Mountains began to become very invested in rug production and were soon adorning their rugs with distinct and symbolic patterns.
The earliest reliable records suggest the High Altai peoples were weaving pile rugs as early as 600 years before the common era. The best evidence for this hypothesis is attributed to a series of excavations carried out by Russian archaeologists at a pair of locations in the High Altai. Those sites were the tombs of Bash-Adar and Pazyryk in southern Siberia.
At Bash-Adar, a partial fragment of a pile rug was discovered. This simple, undecorated rug fragment was carbon-dated to the surprisingly early date of 600 B.C.
Meanwhile, a considerably more headline-grabbing discovery was made at the tomb of Pazyryk. There, a largely intact pile rug was discovered encased in ice. This ancient antique area rug, which is widely referred to as the Pazyryk rug, dated to the fifth century B.C.
While initially in a very distressed state, the frozen rug was eventually carefully and painstakingly restored – a process that revealed a truly remarkable ancient area rug. Complex detail work appears throughout the remarkable antique area carpet. A pattern of squares graces the centre, with each square decorated with floral detail work.
Woven into the borders are a series of further floral details, as well as meticulously woven griffins and a procession of horsemen. The colours are as impressive and feature shades of red, blue, green gold throughout this remarkable composition.
This astonishing level of detail and colour, as well as an impeccably fine weaving technique, has led many scholars to conclude the Pazyryk carpet must be Persian in origin, rather than the work of a band of Siberian nomads. This disagreement is the source of most of the academic disagreement regarding the genesis of hand knotted or pile rugs.
Was the Pazyryk carpet is of Persian origin?
Also excavated at Pazyryk, were a smattering of ancient Persian textiles that were discovered in addition to the Pazyryk carpet itself. Does this evidence mean that the Pazyryk carpet is of Persian origin itself? Or does it mean that it is the result of the Altai nomads’ attempt to reproduce something that they found beautiful? There is yet no fully agreed upon answer. However, there is evidence to suggest that Pazyryk carpet was in fact a local creation, woven by the Altai nomads. More specifically, it is the fallow deer that are woven into the rug that lead some experts to believe that it was in fact a locally produced piece.
These animals are neither indigenous to Persia, nor were they a common motif in Persian textiles from this time. Rather, these deer are common in other artistic media from the High Altai region. Further, the wool and dyes that make up the Pazyryk carpet seem to be local to the High Altai region as well. Thus, it is likely, but far from certain, that this particular rug was in fact woven by the nomadic peoples of the High Altai Mountains and not by the Persians with whom they evidently enjoyed trading. Indeed, there are numerous examples that support the hypothesis that the weavers in this part of the world (the Russian Far East) were influenced by the weavers of the Near East. Ample archaeological evidence suggests that it was perfectly common for those weavers outside of Persia to weave rugs in imitation of the style.
The Dark Ages of Area Rugs
There is an enormous gap of just about one thousand years between the weaving of the Pazyryk carpet in the fifth century B.C. and the reemergence of knotted rugs in the historical record which date back to the fifth century A.D. in Roman-occupied Egypt
Meanwhile, a scattering of evidence suggests that area rugs were woven during this long span of time in places such as the Caucasus and Central Asia. Further, the archaeological record suggests that nomadic tradition of weaving looped carpets proliferated from the High Altai Mountains into China and Tibet, where the craft was modified.
Though the precise genesis of the art of weaving rugs is unclear and the historical record spotty, there is in fact a good body of knowledge concerning the early days of this craft.
What is known, is that rugs have been an important part of human history for millennia. Part of the nature of the academic struggle to understand the origin of rugs lies in the fact that people have most likely been weaving rugs since before they were writing.
Antique area rugs represent a unique development in human culture and offer some of its greatest mysteries and delights.
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