Hi, again,
In my manic and dense learning curve during my Rug Hunt.......I did learn most of the above. Like all learning curves, this one is infinite.
Few know more than I---it's often a focus of my work-- the often complex & insidious, artificially evolved elements impacting an item's imagery among customers, and so, its price point....even factoring in a current market climate Often, none of it reflect inherent qualities. I will not share the gazillion examples I have come upon in every arena from first hand experience and delving......but we know the phenomenon exists. It is fascinating.....be it a given cultivar awarded by an American Orchid Society judge, or what makes a given human being attractive. Re the latter, cultural, biological, developmental....and also artifically evolved elements are involved......and just this has been the subject of documentaries and textbooks! Same deal with hybridizing cats & dogs over centuries......often an aborgation of the health of natural evolution.
Bottom line: to what degree, item by item, does the asking price or value of a given being reflect commerce and its machinations, esoteric components indigenous to a given arena, even sometimes outdated investments in places of origin.....or elements of actual quality? For some not discerning, new is good. Often entirely unjustified. for others, old is good. also, sometimes unjustified.
To what degree is someone's response to anything or anyone a reflection of what is there versus their own unwitting conditioning? This subject has tendrils into almost every life arena.....hardly just consumerism. To what degree is a given individual a slave to all manner of conditioning versus coming from an original sensibility?
Is it a huge offense to put a handblown Quezal shade on a pot metal lamp? I recently discovered, apart from the famous classics, i.e, Birth of Nation, Chaplian, etc......there are some incredibly rich, delightful silent films from the 20s most people would not be moved to actually watch long enough to become engaged.
I see nothing on their site which gives hard data about individual carpets. That boggles.
"Creating a brand" is now an accepted part of business and there are classes centering around just that. And it often verges on the diabolical.
What hones the EYE OF THE BEHOLDER? Very important subject.
Interestingly, I was drawn to not one rug I saw on their site. Not one. Surely not that one posted on Craigslist. Were it 300 kpsi, natural dyes and NZ wool, even without the no child labor laudable.....I would not want it in my life.
I think passionate curiosity is the engine of the journey.....makes us chase data on all levels, yes?
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Late addendum:
I found this re these Tibetan rugs:
http://www.internetrugs....an-rugs-rugs-from-nepal/Sounds interesting, esp wanting to replicate old school elements and natural dyes, etc. Would still like more specifics re construction......tho none I have seen appeal to me personally.