wiktionary RUG or rug can mean carpet , a textile floor covering that is made from various materials. specifically, one made by rug making slang for toupee rug animal covering , to keep domesticated animals warm and or dry University of Groningen , Dutch Rijksuniversiteit Groningen , RUG Ghent University , formerly Belgian Rijksunversiteit Gent , RUG Really Useful Group , Andrew Lloyd Webber s arts theatre group Ripley Under Ground , 1970 novel Ripley Under Ground film Ripley Under Ground , 2005 film Rugby railway station National Rail code in Rugby, Warwickshire . disambig nl Rug ... more details
File Flokati.jpg thumb 250px A white Flokati Rug A flokati rug is a handmade shag wool rug. Making flokatis is a long time tradition of the Vlachs in the Pindus mountains. The natural color of a flokati rug is off white, but they may be dyed different colors. The entire rug is wool, including the backing from which the tapered shag emerges. After the rug is woven, it is placed in the cold water of a river to fluff the shag. They continue to be handmade in the mountains of Greece and are regarded as desirable in American modern decor and children s rooms. Rugs and carpets DEFAULTSORT Flokati Rug Category Rugs and carpets Textile stub de Flokatiteppich ... more details
Kashmar Persian is a city in Razavi Khorasan Province of Iran and is located south of Mashad city. See also Kashmar By www.NasimSoftco.com Persian rug Rugs and carpets DEFAULTSORT Kashmar Rug Category Persian rugs Iran stub ... more details
File Yuruk 1880 .jpg thumb A Yuruk rug, circa 1880 A Y r k rug is a traditional tribal Carpet rug woven in Anatolia . Some believe that this term has been used too generally in describing rugs from this part of the world, for example, in the cases of some Kurds Kurdish rugs. External links http www.ne rugsociety.org gallery collectors eye catalogue 13.htm NERS Catalogue 13 http www.persiancarpetguide.com sw asia Rugs Turkish Turkish.htm Yuruk rugs , gallery http baluch rugs.com History People Yuruk Anatolia.htm The Yuruk of Anatolia Rugs and carpets DEFAULTSORT Yuruk Rug Category Turkic rugs Turkey stub ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 Image Farsh Qom.JPG thumb right 250px A Qom rug Add more details . Qom rugs are made in the Qom Province of Iran, southwest of Tehran . The silk carpets of Qom are known for their high quality. The Qom carpets are the most small dotted carpets. See also Persian rug Rugs and carpets DEFAULTSORT Qom Rug Category Persian rugs Iran stub pt Tapete de Qom ... more details
A Kashmir Rug is a handmade oriental rug , that origins from Kashmir . It is woven flat without pile and entirely covered with embroidered patterns of colored yarns. This type of carpets weaving in Kashmir was not originally indigenous but is thought to have come in by way of Persia . Most designs are distinctly Persian with some local variations. References http jammukashmir.nic.in culture occutn.htm http dictionary.reference.com browse kashmir rug& Rugs and carpets Category Rugs and carpets Category Pakistani rugs and carpets Category Kashmiri culture furniture stub ... more details
Islamic Culture An authentic oriental rug is a handmade carpet that is either knotted with pile textile pile or woven without pile. These rugs normally come from a broad geographical region extending from China and Vietnam in the east to Turkey , Maghreb countries, Cyprus and Iran in the west and the Caucasus in the north to India in the south. People from different cultures, countries, racial groups and religious faiths are involved in the production of oriental rugs. Oriental rugs are organized by origin Persian rug s, Arab rugs, Anatolian rugs, Kurdish rugs, Caucasian rugs, Central Asian rugs, Turkestanian rugs, Chinese rugs, Tibetan rug s and Indian rugs. See also Arabian carpet Azerbaijani rug Persian rug War rugs Kashmir rug Pazyryk burials , including the Pazyryk carpet, circa 400 BC External links http www.weavingartmuseum.org Weaving Art Museum a nonprofit art organization http www.oriental rugs history.com Oriental Rugs History . Excerpts from the book, Oriental Rugs , by John Kimberly Mumford, published 1900, Charles Scribner s Sons, New York. cite web publisher Victoria and Albert Museum url http www.vam.ac.uk collections textiles videos oriental carpets index.html title Oriental Carpets work Textiles accessdate 2008 07 28 http www.antiquariusimports.com learn glossary.php Glossary of oriental rug terms http www.bosi carpet.com chinese silk rug A Branch of Oriental Rug Chinese Silk Rug http www.dilmaghani.com oriental rugs.htm Oriental rug information , with photo gallery of historic rugs http www.bukhara carpets.com making glossary a.html Oriental rugs glossary Image CarpetmakingAlgiers1899.jpg left thumb upright left Carpet manufacture in Algiers , Algeria , c. 1899. File Central Asia rug.jpg thumb left upright A Central Asian rug, 19th century. The symmetrical motif of flowers in a vase on a stand is familiar from Chinese decorative arts. Chinese designs ... color alternation within a rectangular grid. Arab culture Rugs and carpets DEFAULTSORT Oriental Rug ... more details
The Ahar carpet is a type of Azerbaijani carpet made in the town of Ahar in Ahar County near Mount Sabalan in Iran ref Nouri Zadeh, Sh., Persian Carpet The Beautiful Picture of Art in History , Retrieved on June 5, 2008 ref . History Over the last 30 years Ahar carpets have emerged as a recognizable group in the marketplace, and are sold in many parts of Iran outside its town of origin. Characteristics It is a distinctive carpet in the Heriz group of carpets. However the Ahar rug has a more linear design than the Heriz types. The rug is designed so the knot counts are higher but no higher than many carpets that have the geometric design ref http www.persiancarpetguide.com sw asia Rugs Persian Ahar Rugs Ahar Rugs.htm www.persiancarpetguide.com , Retrieved on June 5, 2008 ref References Reflist Rugs and carpets DEFAULTSORT Ahar Rug Category Persian rugs textile stub ... more details
Rug hooking is both an art and a arts and crafts craft where Carpet rug s are made by pulling loops of yarn or fabric through a stiff woven base such as burlap , linen , or rug warp. The loops are pulled ... of yarn. Image Rugaction.jpg thumb A craftsperson creates a hooked rug by pulling lengths of cloth ... motif. Sarah Nickerson is a famous rug hooker Citation needed date December 2010 from Maine who uses ... or animals to as simple as geometrics. Rug hooking has been popular in North America for at least the past 200 years. History of rug hooking The author William Winthrop Kent believed that the earliest ... Rag Rug Making by Jenni Stuart Anderson, ISBN 978 1 900371 53 7 Stuart Anderson states that the most ... produced here off the coast of France as well. Rug hooking as we know it today may have developed ... Maritimes , and Newfoundland and Labrador . In its earliest years, rug hooking was a craft ... never wrote about rug hooking. It was considered a country craft in the days when the word country, used in this context, was derogatory. Today rug hooking or mat making as it is sometimes referred to has been labeled in Canada as a fine art. Image Ruglarge.jpg thumb left A modern hooked rug from Lebanon, NH Lebanon, New Hampshire . Rug hooking was originally developed in England as a method of using leftover scraps of cloth. Since hooking was a craft of poverty, rug makers put to use whatever ... from disappearing in the United States. Mrs. McGown popularized strict guidelines for rug hooking ... designed by Christian Corbet 2008 , hooked by Joan Foster. Rug hooking today In more recent decades ..., combined with knowledge and respect for the past, will allow rug hooking to evolve and grow in the 21st century. Rug hooking today has evolved into two genres, which primarily fall into groups based upon the width of the wool strip employed to create a rug fine hooking and primitive hooking. Fine hooking ..., etc. Wide cut designs are generally less detailed and mimic the naivety of rug hookers of the past ... more details
File RugMakingWomanPassesShuttle.jpg thumb 350px right alt Photo of woman making a rug Woman passing a Shuttle weaving shuttle through the Warp weaving warp on a loom . Rug making is an ancient craft, and covers a variety of techniques. Braided Braided rug s are made by using three or more strips of fabric, usually wool, folding the raw edges to the middle and braiding them together. For an oval rug the center braid should be one inch longer than the width length in feet. example 2 x 4 rug center strip would be 2 2 long. The center braid is laced together and new strips are sewn on to make the braid longer as lacing continues. ref name RugScout cite web url http www.rugscout.com info ask an expert weave.html title Ask An Expert Types of Weave Hand Knotted, Hand Tufted, Flat Weave accessdate 2010 03 22 author RugScout ref Hooking Image Jehla 01.jpg thumb right 140px A latch hook for rugmaking. Traditional rug hooking is a craft where rugs are made by pulling loops of yarn or textile fabric through a stiff woven base such as burlap , linen , rug warp or monks cloth. The loops are pulled through the backing material by using a latch hook mounted in a handle usually wood for leverage. ref name RugScout Rag Rugs Rag rugs were commonly made in households up to the middle of the 20th century ... right alt Photo of a rag rug. Rag rug constructed from t shirts and bed linens Using either yarn or strips ..., it makes a long thread on the right side of the rug. Then, as you lift the needle, it automatically makes it into a loop. These loops pack together to create a rug so solid that chewing dogs and clawing ... the same length. Sometimes referred to as speed hooking , this method of rug hooking is loved ... flat rugs for example kilim s and pile rugs. ref name RugScout The more tightly a rug is woven or knotted ... . Late 19th century. See also Oriental rug s Tapestry Gabbeh knots per sq cm Afghan carpet Flooring ... rug weaving peoples.html The Rug Weaving peoples http www.beaconsfieldrughooking.com Beaconsfield ... more details
rug. During the Hierarchical Divine Liturgy ref A Hierarchical Divine Liturgy is one at which ... to give a blessing, an eagle rug will be placed there for him to stand on as he blesses. The eagle rug ... rug is always placed so that the head of the eagle faces the direction the bishop will be facing. Special Form Before his Consecration , a bishop elect will be led onto a very large eagle rug, used ... as he stands on the portion of the eagle rug depicting the tail of the eagle. He is then led to the center of the eagle rug to make a more thorough explanation of the Orthodoxy of his Faith regarding ... and Sacred Tradition . He is then led to the portion of the eagle rug depicting the head of the eagle ... more details
A Kashan rug is a type of Persian rug from the area of Kashan . Kashan is a city in Isfahan Province in North Central Iran. There was production of Persian Carpet at Royal workshops in the 17th and early 18th century. Many authors attribute Persian Rugs and Carpet to Kashan in the 16th century particularly of the so called small silk Kashan Persian Carpet group. According to Rug Scholar Barry O Connell that is a leap of faith not necessarily supported by any published evidence. The Persian Carpet workshops ceased production in about 1722 after the Afghan invasion. Persian Carpet production was very minor until the 20th century. Historically Kashan was a major center in the garment trade. In the late 19th century the market shifted and the local industry went from fine wool cloth to fine wool carpets. High quality wool was sourced from Sabzevar Today some of the best Kashans are from Ardistan and excellent ones are also produced in Yazd and Kashmar in Khorasan. Samples of Kashan rugs center gallery Image Little Persia Kashan Rug.jpg A signed Kashan rug Image Little Persia Kashan Rug Room.jpg A silk Kashan rug in a modern penthouse gallery center References reflist Rugs and carpets Category Iranian culture Category Persian rugs Category Kashan Iran stub furniture stub es Alfombra de Kashan fa fr Tapis de Kashan pt Tapete de Kashan tr Ka an hal s ... more details
Image Nain rug.jpg thumb right 250px A round Nain rug of average to lower precision Add more details . Nain rugs are constructed using the Persian knot and can be between 300 and 700 knots per inch. The pile is usually very high quality wool , clipped short and silk is most usually used as highlighting for parts of the detailing in the design. Some pieces are made entirely of silk. Nain rugs are often made in the areas surrounding the Nain town, not necessarily the town itself. Nains utilize the Shah Abbas design and make use of flowing design such as flowers and tendrils. Nain, Iran Nain is a small town in the centre of Iran, very close to the famous city of Isfahan Esfahan . Previous to the beginning of the 20th Century, it was well known for producing high quality handmade woollen cloth. However due to a decline in that business the town commissioned weavers from Esfahan to create hand knott ed rugs, that link is still obvious when looking at a Nain rug today, but they do exhibit a style of their own, using often highlightings of blue with cream or ivory backgrounds. Depending on fineness the warp and weft will be either silk or cotton. Most usually cotton is employed, with varying levels of ply referred to as la , with the lower numbers meaning finer quality. Image Nain rug 1.jpg thumb right 270px A typical Nain rug of average to lower precision Add more details . Nowadays Nain itself only produces very fine 4 or 6 La quality. Other 9 La and 12 La are produced mostly in Razavi Khorasan Province Khorasan region i.e. Kashmar , Mashhad . Nain rug designers By far the most famous and influential Nain masterweaver is Habibian , and rugs produced from his workshop are among the finest and most sought after carpets in the world. Fact date February 2007 Another famous rug and carpet designers in Nain is Reza Jafari Naini who lives in Nain. He is affected by his own tremendous thought of the art, to create such carpet and rug designations. In 1998, one of his designs won ... more details
Infobox FRC Game game title Rug Rage logo Image Rug Rage Logo.jpg 200px year 1993 number teams 25 ref http www.technokats.org documents 1993 93 teamlist.pdf ref number regionals championship location Bishop Guertin High School Nashua, NH chairman winner Team 7 The Labsters wf winner founders winner champions Team 148 prevseason Maize Craze nextseason Tower Power Rug Rage was the game used in the 1993 edition of the FIRST FIRST Robotics Competition . In it, 4 teams competed individually to collect as many large 13 and small water filled balls within their goal area. Layout In Rug Rage, each team had a scoring area. This is where the team had to push balls in order to score. The scoring area had a bar over top of it that created an 11 opening. At the center of the field lay 5 large balls and 20 smaller water filled balls. Gameplay Teams had to push either the 6 diameter water filled balls into their score area for 1 point each or the 13 kickballs into the area for 5 points each. In the case of a tie, the team with the most large balls scored won. Since the opening over the goal area was only 11 high, the kickballs had to be lifted over the bar in order to be scored. Each match lasted 2 minutes. Robot Specs Must fit into a 3x3x3ft cube Must weigh less than 50lbs Notable This was the first time that a FIRST game was played without power cables. Rather, each robot was powered by an on board battery. As indicated by the name, the playing surface was rug References reflist FRCGames Robo stub ... more details
unreferenced date June 2009 Bijar or Bidjar Kurdish rugs are often called the Iron Rugs of Iran. The Bijar was a heavy durable rug that has been very popular in the United States. Now the Bijar rug tends to be a finer thinner more Sarouk like rug. Most Bijar Kurdish carpets are woven by Gerrus Kurds in the Bijar area while a finer copy of Bijar carpets are woven by Afshar weavers who live in the Tekab and Tekkenteppe Area in Gerus. Bijar is a town in North West Iran approximately 45 km from Senneh Sanandaj The Bidjar carpets made in Iran can be put into the following three main categories Traditional Bidjars, f.i. Bidjars with rose motifs. Halvai and Tahjavi Bidjars. Afshar Bidjars. Rugs and carpets Category Rugs and carpets Iran stub furniture stub Category Persian rugs Category Iranian culture Category Turkic rugs Category Azerbaijani culture fa sv Bidjarmatta ... more details
Arak rugs are made in the province of Arak, Iran . Technically, all rugs from Arak can be considered Arak rugs but those termed Sarouk are marked as of the best quality, while the more general term Arak is used for rugs of lesser quality. Meshkabad used to be the term for the worst quality rugs, but such rugs are now called mahal or Arak. Araks are much more coarsely knotted than the rugs of than Sarouk Rug Sarouk rug s. Their designs are quite similar, although rather more crudely executed, and often display bold floral medallions set against open fields. References Empty section date July 2010 External links Rugs and carpets Category Persian rugs Iran stub ... more details
Unreferenced date July 2010 Image Josan new ISC.jpg thumb right New Jozan rug Jozan rugs are made in the surroundings of the village Jozan, Iran Jozan also spelled Josan in the Iran ian Malayer area. Jozan rugs are quality rugs of the Sarouk Rug Sarouk type often with designs as early 20th century Sarouks. Jozan rugs are often called Jozan Sarouk or Malayer Sarouk in trade. In recent production the finer qualities are labelled Jozan and the less finer knotted are labelled Malayer . They are double weft ed on a cotton foundation. External links http www.jozan.net distrikter jozan.asp Photo guide Jozan rugs Rugs and carpets Category Persian rugs Iran stub ... more details
File Re entrant prayer rug Anatolia late 15th early 16th century reverse.jpg thumb 150px left Re entrant or Keyway keyhole prayer mat, also called a Oriental carpets in Renaissance painting Bellini carpets Bellini carpet , Anatolia , late 15th to early 16th century. The mat symbolically describes the environment of a mosque , with the entrance the keyhole , and the mihrab the forward corner with its hanging mosque lamp s. Image Modern.prayer.mat.jpg thumb 100px left Typical manufactured prayer mat showing the Kaaba A prayer rug or prayer mat , in Arabic language Arabic , sajj da plural saj j d or musallah , in Turkish language Turkish seccade or namazl k , in Persian language Persian J nam z , is a piece of fabric to keep the worshipper clean and comfortable during the sujud prostration to God of salah prayer . A Muslim must perform wudu clean himself or herself before prayer and pray in a clean place. Many new prayer mats are manufactured or made by Weaving weavers in a factory. The design of a prayer mat is based on the village it came from and its weaver. When praying, a niche at the top of the mat must be pointed to the Islam ic center for prayer, Mecca . All Muslims ... The prayer rug has a very strong symbolic meaning and traditionally taken care of in a holy manner ... a deep sense of value in the design of the prayer rug. A prayer rug is characterized by a niche at one ... to face Mecca. During prayer the supplicant kneels at the base of the rug and places his or her hands at either side of the niche at the top of the rug, his or her forehead touching the niche. Typical prayer rug sizes are approximately convert 3 x 5 ft abbr on convert 4 x 6 ft abbr on , enough to kneel ... textiles with prayer rug patterns for export. Many modern prayer rugs are strictly commercial pieces ... art Aniconism in Islam References reflist refbegin prayer rug. Encyclop dia Britannica. 2008. Encyclop dia Britannica Online. 23 Oct. 2008 http www.britannica.com EBchecked topic 474169 prayer rug. Faid ... more details
Seraband rug or Saraband , is an Iran ian Persian weaving handwoven floor covering from the Ser e Band district located southwest of Arak, Iran . These 19th century and early 20th century rugs have a mir design, characterized by small, pear or leaf forms in diagonal rows. References The New Encyclop dia Britannica, Microp dia, Volume 10, 1988, pg 644 Rugs and carpets Category Persian rugs furniture stub ... more details
The braided rug was a staple in early, Colonial American culture. Settlers used scraps of clothing and other excess materials to make a floor covering that would provide warmth and protection for a particular home s inhabitants and guests. Braided area rugs can be constructed in a variety of different ways including a banded braid construction, cloth braid construction, flat braid construction and yarn braid construction. Banded braid constructions boast wide bands of either solid colored or variegated braids made from predetermined patterns to offer an appealing, thick look. A cloth braid construction is indicative of a time when outgrown clothing was cut into strips and then hand braided into a floor covering. This particular construction is unique to one manufacturer, Thorndike Mills. A flat braid construction is a common construction as it s one of the easier and more classic methods. Simply intertwine three ropes of fabric and or yarn, and you ll have yourself a braided rug. A yarn braid construction evolves from yarn in its initial state to a uniquely finished area rug. Braiding is an extremely old yet versatile technique that has been modernized over recent decades to display its appeal and charm. Modern Braided Rug Manufacturing Unlike the early American settlers very few people today have the time to make their own rugs. Commercially made http www.braided rugs guide.com a How Braided Rugs Are Made braided rugs that you are likely to find in major department stores and carpet showrooms are machine made using either the tubular or flat braid method. Sources Stoddard, Dr Shari http ds5.cgpublisher.com proposals 13 index html The Making of Braided Rugs , Central Washington University Rugs and carpets Category Rugs and carpets ... more details
Museum of Iran Iran s National Rug Gallery Persian Architecture Carpet Oriental rug kilim Gelim Kilim References references External links http www.carpetmuseum.ir Iran National Rug Gallery http www.islamicarchitecture.org ... more details
Infobox short story See Wikipedia WikiProject Novels or Wikipedia WikiProject Books name The Rug and the Bull title orig translator author L. Sprague de Camp country United States language English language English series Pusadian series genre Fantasy fiction Fantasy short story published in Flashing Swords Flashing Swords 2 publisher Doubleday publisher Doubleday media type Print Hardcover Hardback pub date May, 1973 in literature 1973 english pub date preceded by Ka the Appalling followed by The Stronger Spell The Rug and the Bull is a fantasy story written by L. Sprague de Camp as part of his Pusadian series . It was first published in the anthology Flashing Swords Flashing Swords 2 , edited by Lin Carter Doubleday publisher Doubleday , 1973 . It has also been translated into Italian language Italian , German language German and Dutch language Dutch . Plot summary Gezun of Lorsk presents King Norskezhek of Torrutseish with a scheme to mass produce magic carpets based on a sample in his possession the Carpet of Khazi, which he had previously conned from the magician Larentius Alba of Ausonia. In furtherance of his plan, Gezun finds he must join forces with the president of the local magician s guild, who turns out to be Bokarri, the victim of another of his cons some eighteen years before. The alliance is therefore a shaky one, and when the king turns on Gezun Bokarri leaps at the chance to betray his partner. Transformed by the magician into a bull, the Lorskan discovers he has become the prime attraction in the next deadly contest in the local bullring Chronologically, The Rug and the Bull is the seventh of de Camp s Pusadian tales, and the fifth to feature his protagonist Gezun of Lorsk. Gezun is middle aged at the time of this story, and possessed of a wife and three children. Setting In common with the other Pusadian tales, The Rug and the Bull takes place in a prehistoric ... years The Rug and the Bull end box DEFAULTSORT Rug and the Bull, The Category Fantasy short stories ... more details
File Bokhara suzani.jpg thumb left Bokhara suzani , circa 1800 War rugs Suzani rug Tush kyiz References ... of Turkmen Rugs Rugs and carpets DEFAULTSORT Turkmen Rug Category Rugs and carpets Category Afghan ... more details
cleanup rewrite date November 2010 File Afghan rug weavers.jpg thumb Afghan women from the western part of the country showing traditional Adraskan Afghan carpets. An Afghan rug or Afghan carpet ref name EB is a type of handwoven floor covering textile traditionally made in Afghanistan . ref name pajhwok http www.pajhwok.com viewstory.asp?lng eng&id 49487 Afghan rugs sell like hot cakes ref Many of the Afghan rugs are also woven by Afghan refugees who reside in Pakistan and Iran . ref http afghanrugs.com Afghan rugs ref In any case, Afghan rugs are genuine, often charming and usually phenomenally inexpensive. One of the most exotic and distinctive of all oriental rug s is the Shindand or Adraskan named after local Afghan villages , woven in the Herat Province Herat area, in western Afghanistan. Strangely elongated human and animal figures are their signature look. Another staple of Afghanistan is Baluchi rugs, most notably Baluchi prayer rug s. They are made by Afghanistan s Baloch people , also in the western part of the country. Most of the weavers in Afghanistan are the Ersari Turkmen people Turkmen , but other smaller groups such as Chub Bash and Kizil Ayaks are also in the line of weaving rugs. In addition, Uzbeks , Kyrgyz people Kyrgyz , Kazakhs , and Afghan Arabs Arabs label their rugs according to their ethnic group. ref name EB Afghan carpet. Encyclop dia Britannica . 2009. Encyclop dia Britannica Online. 04 Nov. 2009 http www.britannica.com EBchecked topic 7773 Afghan carpet . ref Various vegetable and other natural dye s are used to produce the rich colors. The rugs are mostly of medium sizes. Many patterns and colors are used, but the traditional and most typical is that of the octagon al elephant s foot Bukhara print, often with a red background. The weavers ... American people are involved in the Oriental rug business, and many frequent the Middle East ... tribal carpets.html Tribal Carpets of Afghanistan Rugs and carpets DEFAULTSORT Afghan Rug Category ... more details
Image Persian Balooch Rug.jpg thumb right 150px A Persian Balouch rug Baluch rugs are woven near the South Eastern border of Iran and in Western regions of Afghanistan. Being of tribal and often nomadic origin the Baluch rugs are generally small in size, typically limited to a length of 8 ft. ref http www.little persia.com ?action Balooch Balouch rug origin & description guide. ref Often using wool Pile weave pile and foundation the rugs are resilient, however due to the materials used and the circumstances of the weavers the knot count is generally low with about 60 180 knots per square inch KPSI. The people of Baluchistan are descendants of Turkmen weavers and they are amongst the poorest in the in Iran. Low wages and tribal lifestyles mean that Balouch rugs are some of the best value for money carpets from Iran and Afghanistan . See also Knots per sq cm References reflist Rugs and carpets Category Pakistani rugs and carpets Category Persian rugs Iran stub ... more details