This Antique Rug Fire Brick on Light Tan is a Flat Woven Suzani Kilim area rug and a true one-of-a-kind work of art. Persian rugs are known as some of the best area rugs in the world.This Persian rug is made with 100% No Pile pile,a 100% Handspun Wool foundation and 100% vegetable dye. The KPSI is 82 for this Persian rug;it took 42 days to weave and is in Excellent Vintage Enhanced condition.
Suzani Kilims are flat-weave carpets which do not have a pile and were woven over a thousand years before pile rugs appeared.Many motifs have remained unchanged over the centuries.The designs usually consist of geometric elements, with many hexagons. The colors are plentiful and similar to the colors used in ancient times.This type of Kilim is embroidered with raised figures after the ordinary kilim is woven.
Kurdish carpets are woven throughout western Iran, in and around the rugged mountains of Kurdistan. The resilient Kurds descend from the ancient nomads that roamed the area thousands of years ago. They live a semi-nomadic life, either in villages or in tribes away from the cities where they can still practise their traditions and live as their ancestors did. Some Kurdish tribes include the Herki, Senjabi, Gurani, Jaffid, and Kalhors. Major rug-producing centers include Senneh, Bidjar, and the district of Khamseh. Other Kurdish villages and districts that produce rugs are Borchelu, Goltogh, Khoi, Koliai, Lylyan, Mousel, Nanadj, Songhore, Touserkan, and Zagheh. There are many grades of hand-made rugs produced in this vast province, and almost every color can be seen in these rugs. All have a pile of wool, and the foundations are of cotton, or more rarely, wool or goat hair. The weaving quality in Kurdish rugs varies from loose to dense knotting and the Persian asymmetrical knot is used more frequently than the Turkish symmetrical knot. The colors are mainly from natural dyes, and bright lively colors are used to bring life to their simple homes. The Kurds are a very peaceful, gentle people who prefer their simple nomadic lives to the complexities and frustrations of the modern world. Many other major rug-producing centers of Iran, such as Hamadan, Lorestan, or even Arak, show traces of Kurdish influence.