Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Dealers, Member Joined: 4/5/2008(UTC) Posts: 404 Points: 1,235 Location: Yonkers, NY
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That's pretty funny Mosaic. My suspicion is that he was sincere in his hustling the rug out of his shop. Having seen a carpet that sold for millions, those big ticket items don't end up rotted in people's basements. And condition is a very big piece of the puzzle when it comes to worth. The condition as you describe and how it looks in the photos, looks pretty rough. In my rug class, the teacher talked about what a rug we are assessing would bring in perfect condition, and then start taking away for problems, and the cost of restoration/repair. It sounds like it probably had mold and water rot. Is that fair to say. If so, that's pretty much end of story. I saw some incredible rugs in my teachers storeroom that he said would have some pretty high price tags on them if they were perfect. As they were, he said he coldn't get more than a few hundred bucks or a couple of thousand for any of them. And none of them were in such bad shape that I wasn't drooling over them. There are, after all, only so many Stradivarius carpets in the world. And then the question of value is an interesting one. It seems that the super high price carpets are either mamoth size or have some fascinating historic provenance. Like the Doris Duke carpet, that sold for so many millions in part because of what it was, in part because of Doris Duke, (Doris Duke, who cares?) but I think the real value of the carpet was in the commentary by one of the greatest art historians in the world that the carpet was the, single, and highest apex product of the Abbasid period of imperial carpets. Not because he said it, but because it was true. I am sure the man who bought it never heard of Doris Duke.
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