Rug
Buying Guide 
Rug making is an ancient tradition. The
technique of hand knotting rugs dates back at least three
thousand years to when handmade rugs were used in Asian
cultures for prayer, to add warmth to the home, for
adornment, and even to cushion horse saddles. Today,
master craftspeople create works of art ranging from
patterns that have been passed down through the centuries
to the diverse styles of contemporary
designers.
Purchasing a handmade rug can be daunting,
yet those who succeed in buying beautiful Oriental rugs
are richly rewarded. So how can you choose well? Where
will you find rugs of outstanding quality? And how can
you judge the value of Oriental rugs? Here are some
guidelines.
1.
The Portrait of
an Excellent Oriental Rug.
A good-quality Oriental rug, which can spend
upwards of three months on the loom, is one that lies
flat and straight on the floor and is reasonably regular
in its shape. It has lively, lustrous wool. Its colors
have neither faded nor bled. In fact its colors, whether
of natural or modern synthetic dyes, are harmonious and
in balance. Often there is a pleasant variegation in the
colors of an excellent handmade rug and a feeling that
the rug has personality or character. Luminescent silk
might be used to highlight its design. It has been
intelligently “finished” so that it is neither washed
out, nor unnaturally shiny, nor unpleasantly bright and
harsh. The elements of the carpet’s design seem to fit
naturally together. Above all, the rug has an X quality,
a hook, a spirit that speaks of its having been designed
and woven by a skilled adult artisan.
2.
How to Find a
Quality Oriental Rug
Perhaps the single most important step in
buying a good rug is to find a rug dealer you can trust.
Why? First of all, good dealers know very well which rugs
are good and they have large selections of them. The best
rug dealers are born educators who love to share their
knowledge with you. They guide you without bullying,
teach you without being dogmatic. They are very concerned
about child labor in the rug industry and carefully avoid
rugs made under suspect conditions.
Look for well-established dealers. Forget
the stores that have endless “going out of business”
sales. Research a store’s reputation. Surf the web for
clues. Some of the finest, most ethical dealers in the
country can be located by zip code through RugMark’s
website at www.rugmark.org. Ask friends where they bought
their Oriental rugs. And finally, trust yourself. If you
feel uncomfortable with a dealer, move on.
3.
Do Some
Research
1.
First,
measure the area the rug will cover. Remember, you should
probably have a border of flooring all the way around the rug.
Allow for a range of sizes: for instance, between 8 and 9 feet
wide by 11 to 12 feet in length. The greater the range, the
more choices you will have.
2.
If
possible, gather samples of drapery and upholstery fabrics and
bring them with you to the showroom.
3.
Consider
whether you prefer traditional Oriental rugs or those with
contemporary designs. Traditional designs draw on thousands of
years of rug history and are always fashionable. Contemporary
designs spring from the inspiration of artists with a
sophisticated understanding of today’s fashions. RugMark can
help introduce you to the work of some of the best contemporary
rug designers (www.rugmark.org).
4.
One option
is to retain an interior designer. Designers can be wonderful
allies in finding the right rugs. But remember, their focus is
likely to be on “the look.” The rug dealer’s focus will be on
quality. Yours will be on what you like. Listen to all, but
mostly to you.
4.
Buy Rugs Made
By Adult Artisans
0.
As you
focus on buying a rug made by adults and not by children,
remember that the rugs most likely to have been made from
illegal child labor are the cheapest Indian, Pakistani and
Nepalese rugs.
1.
The rugs
least likely to have been made with child labor are those that
are of exceptional quality. Almost by definition, quality
carpets have been woven by experienced, adult craftsmen,
another compelling reason to buy a rug of excellent quality.
2.
Rugs with
the RugMark® label are independently certified to be free of
illegal child labor. RugMark certified rugs are widely
available and may be easily sourced through www.rugmark.org.
5.
Trust, but
Verify
Good rug dealers will encourage you to take
rugs home on approval without obligation. To best take
advantage of this buying tool, arm yourself with some
basic information.
0.
Good rugs
lie flat on their backs, without ripples along their edges.
Rugs with wrinkles, curled edges, etc., disturb the eye and
cause premature wear. Still, don’t seek perfection. Some
irregularity is part and parcel of “hand made.”
1.
Some rugs
are misshapen. They came off the loom wider on one end than the
other, or with bowing edges or an hourglass figure. All else
being equal, a regular, geometrically-correct shape is
preferable to a visibly distorted one.
2.
Some folks
love rugs that have faded into a low key, innocuous absence of
color, but they should not be surprised when their beloved rug
is spurned by others. Good rugs have colors that resist fading
in normal light and resist bleeding when exposed to water.
3.
Rugs in
good condition are prized above those in bad condition. Moth
damage, holes, rips, stains and missing edges are tolerable to
most people only when rugs are really old.
4.
Quality
wool makes a difference. Good wool has a noticeable glow. It
feels fleecy, perhaps a little oily, and soft. It absorbs dye
well and takes heavy use. Inferior wool is full of kemp and
hair and is scratchy, dry, lusterless and incapable of properly
absorbing dye. Good wool is obviously preferable.
6.
Points to
Consider
Besides the considerations above, there are
also questions that are more controversial, more
subjective or more difficult to answer.
Are Finely Knotted Rugs
Better?
Rugs are available in myriad densities, with
knot counts ranging from 30 knots per inch to over 1,000.
Most often, finely knotted or finely woven rugs are most
desirable. There are several reasons why. For one, curved
lines in a rug’s design can be “drawn” more smoothly and
gracefully in a rug with many knots per square inch, just
as a lot of pixels in a television screen allow for more
natural looking lines. And rugs that are very finely
knotted have such dense surfaces that light is
attractively reflected from them. But fine knotting alone
does not make a rug good. In fact, a fine weave simply is
not appropriate in certain kinds of tribal
rugs.
Natural vs. Synthetic
Dyes
Antique Oriental rug collectors agree that
natural dyes, such as reds from madder redroot or
pomegranate peel, browns from walnut shells, or blues
from the blue indigo plant, are more desirable than
synthetic. Natural dyes add roughly 30% to the cost of a
rug, but they also add to its charm and its
value.
However, the synthetic dyes used today are
available in an infinite array of colors and shades and
hold their color well over time. It is impossible without
expensive laboratory analysis to be certain whether a
given dye is natural or synthetic. There is so much to be
said on this subject that we cannot tackle it
here.
Hand Spun vs. Machine Spun
Wool
For thousands of years, weavers spun wool by
hand to create the yarn that makes up the pile of
Oriental rugs. By about WWII, nearly all wool was spun by
machines. Now, since about 1985, a small but appreciable
number of weavers are again spinning wool by hand. Though
some prefer the uniformity of machine spun wool, most
collectors and connoisseurs value the effect produced by
hand spun wool. When spun by hand, yarn absorbs more dye
where it is loosely spun and less dye where it is spun
tightly, thus producing pleasant variegation in the
colors of a rug.
Can You Judge Quality by
Height of the Pile?
Inexperienced rug buyers sometimes mistake a
thick pile for quality. In fact, the finest rugs often
are the thinnest. Still, if a rug is going to take
significant traffic, it should have plenty of
body.
Is the Finishing Process
Important?
At the very end of the production process,
rugs are washed in substances that subtly tone down the
relatively bright colors of a new rug. When the finishing
process is mismanaged, rugs can be bleached to death and
even muddied up with gunk. Look for rugs with a healthy,
natural glow.
RugMark thanks Emmett Eiland for writing
this guide. Emmett Eiland has operated an Oriental rug
business in Berkeley, California since 1969. He has
staged exhibitions of Oriental rugs, made films on the
art of Oriental rug repair and on rug weaving in
Afghanistan, traveled extensively in Central Asia,
published a book on Oriental rugs, and written a number
of articles for Oriental rug journals. More in-depth
information on these and other issues surrounding the
purchase of Oriental rugs may be found in Eiland’s book
Oriental Rugs Today (Berkeley Hills Books,
2003).
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