Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Dealers, Member Joined: 4/5/2008(UTC) Posts: 404 Points: 1,235 Location: Yonkers, NY
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As for this manipulating a rug back to some semlance of health.....it sounds evil....and no real rug person would engage in that. Someone commerce-driven only incidentally dealng in rugs....would. Sounds as if it is for appearances to fool the unenlightened.>>>>
Not so fast. The description I read came from a book about the Turkish carpet bazaars in Istanbul in the early 1900s and the whole district of them engaged in this process. It was how things were done. Do not think that all carpets in the east are the precious rarities they are here. People have lived on carpets, eat, slept, worked, fought, and entertained on carpets for thousands of years in Iran, Turkey, all of central Asia. Mosques, huge massive open spaces are covered with rugs, maybe a couple of hundred of them, and they are periodically turned out and replaced. They see a lot of wear, and are taken, at least they were, to these dealers who paid to have them refurbished and brought them back to life and resold them. Nothing dishonest or uncommon there at all. I guarantee you there are rugs on eBay that have undergone this or a very similar process. How else can you buy these rugs for a few hundred dollars? A lot of the hoo-ha people expereince in the carpet industry, even in the Middle East and certainly in Turkey, is catering to this western notion that each and every carpet is a precious treasure worth an arm and a leg. It is, usually, but not for the reasons the casual western buyer thinks they are. I have read some very funny accounts of hard core western travelers who are well used to Iran and Central Asia being given the big poetic tourist run around and then when they tell the dealer they live in Iran or wherever, the merchant laughs and gets down to serious business.
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