I bought a gorgeous looking gabbeh on ebay, which was described as 'vegetable colours'. It is clearly not all vegetable colours.
I have questions about what was done to the rug to make it look like vegetable colours, and how this may affect its value.
(i) almost all the 'hot' orange motives have been carefully tinted with something (not sure what, seems colourfast) on the surface of the rug, to make it look less hot. You can see that on the picture called "tinted and half mottled star"
(ii) there is clearly a hot pink, but very sparcely used, and I saw that on the photos before I bought the rug.
(iii) a number of the other colours have tipfading, but it is very very strange: it is a very regular rough 'mottling', the very top of the pile, and on the same pic you see that sometimes it is only on half of a motive (blue star), no tip-fading on the other half at all. So, I don't know (a) whether the mottled-tipfaded colours are all synthetic, and (b) whether some kind of chemical was used to produce the mottling, or whether this is just the effect of light exposure.
Otherwise the rug is in perfect condition, full soft dense pile. Size is 3'11'x 6'4". It was described as 1950s Gashgai Kashguli Gabbeh. If anyone can tell whether that description is accurate, I'd also be grateful.
(Warp and weft are sheep wool, the warps are undyed, with slight colour variation, the wefts are six different colours, the weaver changed colours every once in a while.)
Shereen attached the following image(s):