Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Dealers, Member Joined: 5/4/2009(UTC) Posts: 453 Points: 1,380 Location: Glasgow, UK
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I'm sure you've all come across the Mori Bokhara and Jaldar rugs and the Pak-Persian designs using a silk like wool that they sometimes call "silk-touch". Does anyone actually know what the material actually is?
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Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member, Dealers Joined: 10/19/2009(UTC) Posts: 283 Points: 864 Location: Luxembourg
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Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Dealers, Member Joined: 5/4/2009(UTC) Posts: 453 Points: 1,380 Location: Glasgow, UK
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I thought viscose/rayon but what made me doubt it is a couple of years ago when the guy who provided the rug cleaning training and equipment was in I asked him what he thought it was and he said it was wool. In fact he said it was a good wool. Which is worrying... I was never convinced. Although saying that I don't think it's 100% viscose, it's not like the art-silk type rugs but it's not like wool either. Perhaps the ones we have are blends or something.
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Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Dealers, Member Joined: 2/14/2010(UTC) Posts: 1,097 Points: 3,393 Location: Germany
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Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Dealers, Member Joined: 5/4/2009(UTC) Posts: 453 Points: 1,380 Location: Glasgow, UK
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Next logical question would be... why? Why do people go to all that effort of knotting a rug only to make it out of sub-standard materials? It's the same with the silk rugs (although I'm sure the price difference between viscose and silk is a lot more than between wool and viscose or rayon). It just seems like madness... like painstakingly carving handmade furniture but using MDF.
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