www.carpetebuy... Sarouk rugs are knotted in western Iran. The pattern is often a medallion with loops. The colors are red, pink, beige and dark blue. They are well-made and durable.
Thank you for these videos. Love these Sarouk carpets. These Iranain weavers are artisans producing art that will be enjoyed for over a century. In US, most Sarouks are burgundy-colorized as mentioned in video.
Thanks for your clarification. The confusing thing for an amateur like myself is knowing what is a pattern copied by another region or country and what is from the original source. Most of my rugs either have no tag or a tag merely indicating the measurements. The dealer tells me what it is but I have noticed that dealers and other experts may disagree with each other. For examples, a dealer sold me what he called a Qashqa'i but an expert at a textile museum called a Khamseh Confederation. Another dealer sold me a Lilihan, while a dealer who cleaned it later called it a Sarouk. I think it would be useful if countries had a system, such as the French do for wine, to identify something from a specific region. It's probably too late for this, however.
Magnificent! Thank you for your great work, five years on!
Thank you for these videos. Love these Sarouk carpets. These Iranain weavers are artisans producing art that will be enjoyed for over a century. In US, most Sarouks are burgundy-colorized as mentioned in video.
sooooooooooooooo useful!
Really enjoy these videos!
في مكان في مصر اجد مثل هذا السجاد الجميل هذا
بالتحديد في وسط البلد في الةاهرة
I believe the last rug shown was Bakhtiari not Sarouk. Any comments?
Bakhtiari pattern. It's being woven in other parts of Iran now. Still Sarouk.
Thanks for your clarification. The confusing thing for an amateur like myself is knowing what is a pattern copied by another region or country and what is from the original source. Most of my rugs either have no tag or a tag merely indicating the measurements. The dealer tells me what it is but I have noticed that dealers and other experts may disagree with each other. For examples, a dealer sold me what he called a Qashqa'i but an expert at a textile museum called a Khamseh Confederation. Another dealer sold me a Lilihan, while a dealer who cleaned it later called it a Sarouk. I think it would be useful if countries had a system, such as the French do for wine, to identify something from a specific region. It's probably too late for this, however.
@@edwardb7811 , полностью вами согласен!
Finns det utbildnings att lära hur man börja vävar matt på persiska språk?🙏