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Carpets
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Speciman
of a fine Kashmir carpet
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A carpet
may well be the most expensive purchase from your trip to Kashmir but
it is a lifelong investment. Kashmiri carpets are known the world over
for two things - they are handmade, never machine made, and they are
always knotted, never tufted. It is extremely instructive to watch a
carpet being made - your dealer can probably arrange this for you.
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Kashmir
carpet
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Stretched
tightly on a frame is the warp of a carpet. The weft threads are passed
through, the 'taleem' or design and colour specification
are then worked out on this. A strand of yarn is looped through the
warp and weft, knotted and then cut. The yarn used normally is silk,
wool or both. Woollen carpets always have a cotton base (warp &
weft), while silk usually has a cotton base. Sometimes however, the
base is also of silk, in which case you will see that the fringe is
silk, and the cost increases proportionately. Occasionally, carpets
are made on a cotton base, mainly of woollen pile with silk yarn used
as highlights on certain motifs.
When the
dealer specifies the percentage of each yarn used, he is taking into
account the yarn used for the base too. Therefore, a carpet with a pure
silk pile may be referred to as "80 per cent silk carpet".
Do not be alarmed! He is merely stating that the warp and weft are not
of silk.
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A Kashmir
carpet
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A third
type of yarn staple, also referred to as mercerised cotton, is also
mentioned here, although it is by no means traditionally Kashmiri, but
a man-made fibre. Its shine is not unlike that of silk, although in
price it is much lower than silk, but more expensive than wool. Staple
carpets are made to fill a slot in the market – customers demand carpets,
which are not unlike silk in appearance so as to blend with the decor
of their houses. One important difference between silk and staple though
is that pure silk is far lighter than staple per unit area. 
Carpet
weaving in Kashmir was not originally indigenous but is thought
to have come in by way of Persia. Till today, most designs are distinctly
Persian with local variations. One example, however, of a typical Kashmir
carpet is the "tree of life". Persian design notwithstanding,
any carpet woven in Kashmir is referred to as Kashmiri. The colour-way
of a carpet and its details, differentiate it from any other carpet.
It should be kept in mind that although the colours of Kashmiri carpets
are more subtle and muted than elsewhere in the country, only chemical
dyes are used - vegetable dyes have not been available now for a hundred
years.
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A carpet showroom in Srinagar
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The knotting
of carpet is the most important aspect, determining its durability and
value, in addition to its design. Basically, the more knots per square
inch, the greater its value and durability. Count the number of knots
on the reverse of carpet in any one square inch, and it should be roughly
the same as the dealer tells you, give or take 10 knots. If you are
told that a carpet contains 360 knots, and your count indicates about
10 less, it simply means that the weft has not been evenly combed down
in parts -- this is not a fault, and several random checks throughout
the carpet will even go above the figure of the dealer's estimate. Also,
there are single and double-knotted carpets. You can quite easily identify
one from the other on the reverse of the carpet. The effect that it
has on the pile too is important - a double-knotted carpet has a pile
that bends when you brush it one way with your hand, and stands upright
when it is brushed in another direction. A single knotted carpet is
fluffier and more resistant to the touch, there is no 'right' and 'wrong'
side to brush it.
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A Carpet in the making
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Points
to keep in mind when choosing a carpet:
* Whether
it has been made of silk pile on silk base, silk pile on cotton base,
silk and
wool on cotton base or wool on cotton base.
* The number
of knots on the reverse of the carpet; whether one or more line in the
design
has been omitted completely in which case the pattern looks lopsided;
* Whether
any element in the design has been wrongly woven so that one motif is
larger
or smaller at one end than the corresponding motif at another end, etc.
* Whether
each motif or element of design has clear, crisp outlines; blurred edges
indicate
a fault in the weaving.
* Whether
the edges of the carpet are crooked as if it had been incorrectly mounted
on the
frame, so that one end is broader than another.

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