RugsandCarpets.gogoodpages.com

 Get the Perfect Rug or Carpet for Your home-Learn More about Rugs and Carpets Before You Buy

 Carpet Corner

 
 
 

Quality in Ethnic Rugs and Carpets

How do you judge quality?


 Here are some tips:

* Machine or handmade: If the fringe around the edges is sewn on, the rug is as a rule made by a machine. In a hand-knotted rug, the fringe is the foundation upon which the weavers tie knots and create the rug. Handmade is more sought-after and more expensive, unless the machine-made rug has been custom ordered to create a specific design.

* Materials: The best rugs are made from high-quality wool and silk. Good wool is fine and shiny; poor quality is harsh and coarse, and it lacks luster. Rugs made from other materials are not as valuable because they do not last as long.

* Knot count: The higher number of knots per square inch usually indicates the design is more refined. Because more knots require more time and work, these rugs are usually more valuable.

The quality of the rugs is also determined by the fineness of the knots. The finer the knot, the more realistic the design. Coarse Turkish rugs may have as few as 400 knots, whereas fine Persian or Indian rugs might have many thousands per square centimeter.

It is important to measure the knot count at the center of the rug, since many weavers increase the knot count at the edges to fool shoppers.

* Colors: Color is the most vital factor in the assessment of any rug. The best colors are achieved using natural vegetable and insect dyes. The more complicated the use of color, the more valuable a rug.
In general, 13 colors or more are considered good, with 20 or more rated as excellent. But a design that has intricate patterns created with color can be more valuable than one with more colors but less detail.

* Weight: "Heavy" does not necessarily mean quality. The value of a hand-made rug is in quality materials and workmanship, not weight.

 quality carpet