As one of the earliest forms of recycling, hooked rugs are
indeed unique! In the late 1800"s worn garments were not thrown away, but rather
cut into thin strips and hooked into a grid of empty burlap bags. Gradually developing
into a fine craft, rugs were also made with yarn as is evident in the Cheticamp
rugs.
Easiest to mistake for hand-knotted rugs are the hand-tufted
rugs from China and India. Genuine "Oriental rugs" come from Afghanistan,
China, India, Iran, Nepal, Pakistan, Tibet, Turkey, some of the
southern territories of the old Soviet Union (like Azerbaijan
or Armenia), Balkan countries like Romania and Albania, and some
North African countries like Morocco and Egypt.
Hand-tufted
rugs are made using a "gun": a hand-operated tool that punches strands of wool
into a canvas stretched on a frame. The design of the rug is drawn on the canvas,
and the worker fills in the pattern with the appropriate color wool. When the
rug design is fully piled (and this can take as little as three or four days for
a 9" x 12" carpet), the rug is removed from the frame and a scrim fabric is glued
to the back of the rug. It is only the glue on the back of the rug that holds
the wool pile in place--yarn is not knotted over warps as with a real Oriental
rug. Because the tufting process does not produce the fringe that is normal to
a hand-woven rug (where the fringe is the end of the warp strings that run from
one end of the rug to the other), separate fringe (usually woven as a tape) is
often glued or sewn to the ends of a tufted rug.
The tufted rug is handmade,
but it is not an Oriental rug because it is not knotted. In deciding to make a
tufted rug instead of a real Oriental rug, the maker has chosen the cheapest way
of making a piled rug. The tufted rug will rarely wear as well as the hand-knotted
rug because the wool is almost certainly of a cheaper grade, and because the inexpensive
latex glue used becomes brittle and deteriorates over time. A hand-tufted rug
has resale value only equivalent to a machine-made rug of the same size.
Tufted
Chinese rugs appear in colors and patterns almost identical to hand-knotted, pastel
Chinese rugs. Hand-tufted Chinese have fringe like hand-knotted Chinese, and from
the front look nearly identical to hand-knotted Chinese. Whereas a 9" x 12" hand-knotted
Chinese Oriental rug in "90 line" quality (a commonly available weave) might cost
about $1,500, a 9" x 12" hand-tufted Chinese rug would cost no more than about
$700. Tufted rugs from India come in a wide variety of qualities, colors, and
patterns, including both floral and geometric Persian designs. From the face they
can closely resemble low to medium quality hand-knotted rugs.
Easy2source.com
lists a wide variety of Textile Rugs in different designs and shapes. To view
the exhaustive list with information on its suppliers click here.