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          Heriz Rugs and Carpets Guide           

Where is HERIZ?

Heriz Weaver
Weaver
HERIZ
The district and the town of HERIZ (Harees) are known as historical places in the eastern province of Azarbaijan. The town of HERIZ is one of the oldest and the most fertile areas of the province. Important religious and historic places in the area include:
  • Sheikh Ishaaq Tomb
  • Maneeq Grave The Town of HERIZ and the surrounding villages are internationally well-known for the good quality and very beautiful carpets produced there. HERIZ rugs and carpets are valued for their artistic quality not only in IRAN, but all around the world.

  • Qoosahdaq Mountain Heriz
    Qoosahdaq Mountain
    HERIZ
    The small town of Heriz is the center of the weaving areas in Azerbaijan and has given its name to one of the most important production centers.



  • Carpets from the town's workshops are of better quality than those from the less accessible mountain villages.



  • HERIZ red and a highly individual medallion are the main characteristics of these popular carpets.



  • Old and antique examples, in various blue tones, are occasionally found in the trade and at auctions. Brown, beige and turquoise shades indicate older pieces.



  • HERIZ silk carpets are exceptionally finely knotted and are both rare and very beautiful. The designs of old HERIZ rugs differ radically from those of new pieces

  • The Heriz rug is now the Iron Rug of Iran. Heriz are thick, tough, and often inexpensive rugs that appeal strongly to the US market. The Heriz rug is produced in the Northwest corner of Iran on and around Mount Sabalan. Part of the reason for the toughness of Heriz carpets is that Mount Sabalan is sitting on a major deposit of Copper. Trace copper in the drinking water of the sheep produces the highest quality of rug wool. The copper makes the wool stronger and far more resilient than wool from most other areas.

    Heriz rugs include rugs from the towns of Ahar, Heriz, Mehraban, Sarab, Serapi, Bakhshaish, and Gorevan.

    Heriz Rugs and Carpets Guide Heriz rugs include rugs from the towns of Ahar, Heriz, Mehraban, Sarab, Serapi, Bakhshaish, and Gorevan. The Heriz rug is now the Iron Rug of Iran. Heriz are thick, tough, and often inexpensive rugs that appeal strongly to the US market. The Heriz rug is produced in the Northwest corner of Iran on and around Mount Sabalan. Part of the reason for the toughness of Heriz carpets is that Mount Sabalan is sitting on a major deposit of Copper. Trace copper in the drinking water of the sheep produces the highest quality of rug wool. The copper makes the wool stronger and far more resilient than wool from most other areas.

     
    Another factor is the rugs coarse construction. I have heard that Gorevan Heriz can be as course as 25 kpsi but in my experience 30 KPSI is the low end of the normal range to 100 - 110 KPSI on the high end.

    A common mistake is to assume that because Gorevan is the coarsest it must be the least desirable. Gorevan is the coarsest because it uses heavier wefts and warps and because they use multiple singles in the same knot. As we can see in the image to the left four strands or singles may be used in one knot. This makes a wonderfully durable rug.


    | تاريخ : دوشنبه 1387/09/25 | ساعت : 14:25 

      بيان انتقادات و پيشنهادات

              Early carpets part-1           

    The hand-knotted pile carpet probably originated in southern Central Asia between the 3rd and 2nd millennium BCE.

    The earliest surviving pile carpet in the world is called the "Pazyryk Carpet", dating from the 5th-4th century BCE. It was excavated by Sergei Ivanovich Rudenko in 1949 from a Siberian burial ground where it had been preserved in ice in the valley of Pazyryk. The origin of this carpet is attributed to either the Siberian Turkic groups, Scythians or the Persian Achaemenids. This carpet is 200 x 183 cm (6'6" x 6'0") and has 360,000 knots/m²

    The earliest group of surviving knotted pile carpets was produced under Seljuk rule in the first half of the 13th century on the Anatolian peninsula. The eighteen extant works are often referred to as the Konya Carpets. The central field of these large carpets is a repeated geometrical pattern. The borders are ornamented with a large-scale, stylized, angular calligraphy called Kufic, pseudo-Kufic, or Kufesque

     Turkish carpets

    Carpets, whether knotted or flat woven (kilim) are among the best known art forms produced by the Turks from time immemorial. There are environmental, sociological, economic, and religious reasons for the widespread art of carpet weaving among the Turkish people from Central Asia to Turkey.

    The geographical regions where Turks have lived throughout the centuries lie in the temperate zone. Temperature fluctuations between day and night, summer and winter may vary greatly. Turks-nomadicor pastoral, agrarian or town-dwellers, living in tents or in sumptuous houses in large cities-have protected themselves from the extremes of the cold weather by covering the floors, and sometimes walls and doorways, with carpets. The carpets are always hand made of wool or sometimes cotton, with occasional additions of silk. These carpets are natural barriers against the cold. The flat woven kilims which are frequently embroidered are used as blankets, curtains, and covers over sofas or as cushion covers.

    In general, Turks take their shoes off upon entering a house. Thus, the dust and dirt of the outdoors are not tracked inside.The floor coverings remain clean, and the inhabitants of the house, if need be, can comfortably rest on the floor. In the traditional households, women and girls take up carpet and kilim weaving as a hobby as well as a means of earning money. Even technological advances which promoted factory-made carpets could not hamper the production of rug weaving at cottage-industry level. Although synthetic dyes have been in use for the last 150 years, hand made carpets are still considered far superior to industrial carpeting.

    Turkish carpets are among the most sought after household items all over the world. Their rich colors, warm tones, and extraordinary patterns with traditional motifs have contributed to the status that Turkish carpets have maintained since the 13th century. Marco Polo, who traveled through Anatolia in the late 13th century, commented on the beauty and artistry of the carpets. A number of carpets from this period, known as the Seljuk carpets, were discovered in several mosques in central Anatolia. These were under many layers of subsequently placed carpets. The Seljuk carpets are today in the museums in Konya and Istanbul. It is very exciting to imagine that we may be looking at the very same carpets that Marco Polo praised in the year 1272.

    Turkish carpets in the 15th and 16th centuries are best known through European paintings. For example, in the works of Lotto (15th century Italian painter) and Holbein (16th century Germanpainter), Turkish carpets are seen under the feet of the Virgin Mary, or in secular paintings, on tables. In the 17th century, when the Netherlands became a powerful mercantile country, Turkish carpets graced many Dutch homes. The Dutch painter Vermeer represented Turkish carpets predominantly to indicate the high economic and social status of the persons in his paintings. Turkey carpets, as they were known, were too valuable to be put on floors, except under the feet of the Holy Mother and royalty.

    Anyone who enters a mosque has to take off his/her shoes. The mosque is the common house of a Muslim community, therefore, shoes are cast off before the door. Moreover, the ritual of prayer requires the faithful to kneel and touch the ground with one s forehead in humility before God. There are no chairs or benches in a mosque, only carpets. A Turkish mosque is often covered from wall to wall with several layers of carpets.

    The Turkish carpets have exuberant colors, motifs, and patterns. No two carpets are the same; each one is a creation from a new. Because traditionally women have woven the carpets, this is one art form that is rarely appreciated as being the work of a known or a specific artist. Nevertheless, the Turkish women silently continue to create some of the most stunning examples of works of art to be distributed all over Turkey and the world

    | تاريخ : سه شنبه 1387/09/05 | ساعت : 9:30 

      بيان انتقادات و پيشنهادات

              Persian Rugs, Persian Carpets & Oriental Rugs           

    Persian carpets and rugs have always been and still are an intrinsic part of Iranian culture and its people's daily lives. Indeed, carpets and rugs are in many cases the most valued possessions, and they are an integral part of an Iranian home. Thus, it is not surprising that current production levels throughout Iran equal those reached prior to the Islamic Revolution of 1979. In fact, rugs are now even produced in areas where weaving was heretofore not practiced.

    To look at a Persian carpet is to gaze into a world of artistic magnificence nurtured for more then 2,500 years. The Iranians were among the first carpet weaver of the ancient civilizations and, through centuries of creativity and ingenuity building upon the talents of the past, achieved a unique degree of excellence.

    A Sitting Room decorated by a Mashhad Hunting Scene Design Carpet Qashqai Women making Persian Rug
    A Living Room Decorated by a Mashhad Hunting Scene Design carpet

    To Trace the history of the Persian carpet is to follow a path of cultural growth of one of the greatest civilizations the world has ever known. From being simply articles of need, as pure and simple floor entrance covering to protect the nomadic tribesmen from the cold and damp, the increasing beauty of the carpets found them new owners - kings and nobleman, those who looked for signs of wealth or adornment for fine buildings.

    Many people in Iran have invested their whole wealth in Persian carpets - often referred to as an Iranian's stocks and shares - and there are underground storage areas in Tehran's bazaar that are full of fine specimens, kept as investments by shrewd businessmen. And for many centuries, of course, the Persian carpet has received international acknowledgment for its artistic splendor. In palaces, famous building, rich homes and museums throughout the world a Persian carpet is amongst the most treasured possessions. Thus, today Iran produces more carpets than all the other carpet making centers of the world put together.

    | تاريخ : یکشنبه 1387/08/05 | ساعت : 11:46 

      بيان انتقادات و پيشنهادات

    موضوعات

     پیام مدیر
     دانشکده فرش هریس
     دانشگاه هنر تبریز
     با دانشجویان
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     پاسخ به سوالات و درخواستها
     رنگرزی
     English Index
     آموزشی

    بایگانی

    هفته چهارم اردیبهشت 1388
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    سايت هاي همکار


    کوروش بزرگ
    تفسیر نامه
    مستند سازی
    انجمن علمی خاکشناسی ساری
    دانشگاه هنر اسلامی تبریز
    فرش الدار
    موفقیت در کنکور سراسری
    هریز
    تبادل بنر رایگان راد آذر
    خاطرات یک تبریزی
    سایت معتبر جهانی فرش دستباف ایرانی
    سایت بلاگفا
    کارگاه قالی بافی یا علی
    وبلاگي براي همه
    اطلاع رسانی رویدادهای کشور
    آرشيو مطالب فارسي وبلاگ دانشكده فرش
    English index archive for hcacademi
    صنایع دستی ایران و اصفهان
    سایت اطلاع رسانی فرش ایران

    بخش ویژه وبلاگ

    مدیران وبلاگ :

    مسعود رضوانی
    سیامک سرتیپی



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