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Rugs and the various flatwaves are made from five
basic materials; sheep wool, goat hair, cotton,
floss silk, and silk.
Sheep Wool :
The quality of wool varies according to the climate,
the breed of sheep, and the time of year of the
shearing. Wool from sheep that live in warm and arid
regions is normally dry and brittle, and since it
breaks so easly, it ends up being short and feels
lifeless. Good quality wool comes from helthy and
well fed sheep found in cold regions or at high
elevations with good grazing lands and lots of
water. In the colder regions, sheep grow a full
fleece to keep warm and their bodies store fat which
then translates to a high lanolin content within the
fiber which reaches lengths of 10 cm. and more. The
wool so obtained feels silky smooth and yet springy.
Wool from the higher elevations (cooler also) and
from the spring shearing is considered to be the
highest quality. Wool is hand-spun by using
primative utensils called kirmen (drop spindle) and
by spinning wheels. Women usually spin the wool
during idle moments and the street while spinning.
In hand-spun wool, the original length of the fiber
stays the same through the spinning process - a
fiber tahat measured 7 cm. before spinning will
still measure the same after spinning. Wool can also
industrially spun, but the hard twisting of the
fibers by the spinning machines tends to berak some
of the fibers. Although the broken bits and shorter
fibers can be made to adhere together through the
use of oils during the spinning process, the fiber
will have lost some of its strength, which, in turn,
will shorten the life spun of the rugs to be woven.
Cotton
:
In rug and kilim weaving, cotton is used mostly for
the warp threads, as well as for the wefts.
Compaired to wool, cotton is generally considered to
be a more residant fiber and it is less elastic. So,
tighter knots can be tied on cotton warps as opposed
to wool. If very tight knot are tied to a wool warp,
the fiber will break much more frequantly than if
the warps were of cotton. Consequentl, woolen pile
rugs with high knoting density counts will normally
have cotton warps, for example, in Hereke, Ladik,
and Kayseri Bunyan carpets.
Goat
Hair :
Goat hair occosionally found in Oriental rugs in the
side bindings (selvedge), but is more frequently
found in saddle bags, cushions, various types of
stacks, etc.
Floss Silk : Floss silk, or art silk as it is
some times called, is
actually mercerised cotton and is used in certain
rugs that are woven in Kayseri. Although
not identical to silk, a somewhat similar look is
obtained by
mixing cypress tree fibers with cotton that has been
washed in citric acid. Floss silk rugs are woven
with natural cotton warp and weft threads.
Pure
Silk :
The silk used in Turkish
carpet comes from silk cocoons in Bursa. It has a
very high tensile strenght and can be twisted very
finely, plus it is guite resistant. The finest silk
comes from the first part of the amazingly long
single thread with witch silk warm spins its
cocoons. When unrolled, the thread from one silk
cocoon can stretch up to 25,000 meters. The best and
the finest hand-woven rugs in the wold are Hereke
silk rugs. A normal quality silk
Hereke
should have 1,000,000 knots per square meter. To day
with tremendous care, attention and density, some
exceptional Hereke silk rugs are woven with
3,240,000 knots per square meter; that is 18 knots
vertically on 1 cm. And 18 knots horizontally on 1
cm. This indicates how finely the silk can be
twisted and woven, as well as how strong and
resisdent this piles can be.
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