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  • What is this?

    I recently bought this "Vintage Antique Hand Knotted Woven Middle Eastern Tent Band Fragment Segment" on Ebay at a low price from a seller in the US. I am not sure at all what it is, if it is from the Middle East, what its age may be and if it really is a tent band fragment. In fact, it reminds me of some Scandinavian items I have seen, although this is just guessing on my part. Here is some of the description from the seller: "This product is a unique vintage antique hand-knotted woven Middle Eastern tent band fragment made of wool. It is a small rectangular piece with intricate detailing and an antique finish, making it a one-of-a-kind original piece."

    Any ideas?


  • #2
    Hi Erik

    This piece has the warps in the direction of the width. If it was a tentband the loom would have to be as wide as the length of the band. That's pretty nearly impossible. Perhaps it was a belt or a sash.

    Steve Price

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    • #3
      Steve,

      So, you can see an image ? I can't.

      Regards and HNY
      Chuck

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      • #4
        Chuck, I hope you can see this picture!

        Click image for larger version

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        • #5
          Closer look at the technic needed

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          • #6
            It looks like an embossed work. The white ground is kelim and the motifs are piled

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            • #7
              Unfortunately, I have not received the rug yet, but here is a somewhat closer look provided by the seller:

              Click image for larger version

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              • #8
                Hi Erik,

                From the closeup image it appears that weft floats were used for the red but not the black reciprocal triangles. This unusual feature aside, your textile looks to be some sort of weft substitution weave. We would need to see the reverse or back side to confirm this. In weft substitution weaves weft floats are typically seen on the reverse where a particular color is not needed for the design.

                See http://www.turkotek.com/Marla/The%20...l%20Weaves.pdf

                Joseph

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                • #9
                  Thank you, Joseph, for you interesting comment! I will add pictures of the reverse, when I receive the rug, which is still on the other side of the Atlantic.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Yesterday I finally received the two small rugs, which look somewhat like Swedish röllakan to me, although I bought them from a seller in Arizona as "Vintage Antique Hand Knotted Woven Middle Eastern Tent Band Fragment Segment". I cannot see any difference between the reverse and the front:

                    Click image for larger version

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                    Here are some more close-ups:
                    Click image for larger version

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                    There is a differences in the background white colour between the two rugs, the second one looking a bit "shabby":
                    Click image for larger version

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                    Attached Files

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                    • #11
                      Erik,

                      We really need input from experienced weavers here, or at least someone more familiar than I am with the many weave structures and weaving techniques. That said, after consulting several articles by Marla Mallett and others, the absence of obvious weft floats on the back would appear to rule out a typical weft substitution weave. Except for the slightly raised (puffed up) red triangles, which could have been fashioned using supplementary weft wrapping (or possibly brocade), your textile would appear to fall under the general category of a "plain weave", assuming that both the design and the colors are the same front-and-back. However, it does not appear to be a simple balanced plain weave but rather one of the variants. For example, from your closeup images some parts appear to feature diagonal design elements. Double cloths are yet another category of weaving but here the colors are reversed thereby creating a positive-negative effect front-to-back (here yarns are hidden between the two layers when they not needed for the design). However, most double cloths are limited to only two colors, except for some complex, multi-warped weaves.

                      I'm afraid that's all I have to offer.

                      Joseph

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                      • #12
                        Just want to add that I found other textiles with what appear to be similar structures and designs described as weft-faced twill weaves. I'm not certain but in some of the closeup images of your sash(?) (not just the red triangles) the wefts appear to be going over more than one warp.

                        Joseph

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                        • #13
                          Thank you, Joseph, for your very interesting and knowledgeable analysis of the weaving! Any thoughts about the origins of these items?

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                          • #14
                            Hi Eric,

                            Joel Greifinger has some knowledge of Scandanavian textiles; maybe he will comment. It certainly doesn't look like any Middle Eastern or Central Asian work that I've seen.

                            Regards
                            Chuck

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