Fereydan Rug

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Fereydan Rug
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Design of Faridan Rug (Rugman)
General information
NameFaridan Rug
Original nameقالی فریدن
Alternative name(s)Faridan Carpet
Origin Iran: Isfahan
CategoryVillage
Technical information
Common designsKheshti
Common colorsCrismon, Navy Blue, White, Yellow, Green
Dyeing methodNatural, Synthetic
Pile materialWool
Foundation materialCotton
Knot typeSymmetrical (Turkish)


History

Fereydan is a region located in the Isfahan Province of central Iran. It has a Georgian and Armenian population that was forcefully moved to this region during the Safavid Empire’s occupation of the CAUCASUS region in the early seventeenth century. The Bakhtiari tribe settled in this area and constitutes a large part of the Fereydan population. Rugs and carpets woven in this region—called “Fereydan-Bakhtiari”—are known in the market from the last quarter of the nineteenth century. During this period “Khan” carpets were produced and commissioned in Fereydan for officials and Khanate rulers. Some early rugs made by Armenian weavers with high-quality wool and coloration are called “Armeni Boft,” which means “made by Armenians” in Farsi.
By the late twentieth century some Fereydan weavers switched from weaving traditional designs to styles similar to those of other regions in Iran in accordance with domestic and foreign export demand. These weavings may be marketed by the origin of design and color produced rather than the weaving location.[1]

Materials

Foundation and Pile

Early Fereydan carpets may have a wool foundation, but generally it is cotton with a wool pile.[2]

Techniques and structures

Color and dyeing

The background and border colors are mainly strong reds, dark blues, or ivory. Additionally, shades of brown, gold, green, blue, and black are woven for the flowers and design elements. Dark brown or black is applied in design outlines.[3]

Motifs and Designs

Fereydan rugs and carpets are woven in the semi-geometric, traditional Bakhtiari styles, with medallion, allover, pendant, or panel Garden designs. The garden designs have Kheshti (square) or lozenge shapes in the field, with flowers, Shrub motifs, or trees.[4]

Weaving techniques

The Turkish (symmetric) knot is invariably utilized. The formats range from small bags to carpets in large room dimensions. The weaving quality is gen-erally medium to good in grade.[5]

See also

Bakhtiari Rug, Armenian Rug

References

  1. Moheban, 2015, p.189-190
  2. Moheban, 2015, p.190
  3. Moheban, 2015, p.190
  4. Moheban, 2015, p.190
  5. Moheban, 2015, p.190

Bibliography