Saturday, January 20.
Persian Rugs.
Today, Reader Dearest, we have taken it upon ourselves to adorn your dashboards with rich colors, compelling designs, hypnotic patterns, and the very finest all-natural wools.
These luxury rugs are hand-knotted, which means that each individual strand of wool or silk is tied onto the rug's very foundation by hand. This is a painstaking process, and it can take months or even years to complete before they arrive at their magnificent final form. There's probably a metaphor in there, but frankly, it's too early in the day for that.
Enjoy the rugs x
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Beni ourain Rug displays the simplest of motifs, this Moroccan Rug is a wonderful example of tribal weaving.
With striped large flatweave protective borders frame the composition and flatwoven pattern. This moroccan rug is handwoven by berber women with ivory wool and light beige wool. Soft underfoot and medium pile. Shipped from Morocco. It’s new, berber and moroccan. handmade by berber women from beniourain tribe.
Because the rug is new it may shed and it’s completely normal and will stop within a couple of weeks. For cleaning, we recommend a regular vacuum cleaning, we highly recommend dry clean ( we don't recommend steam cleaning, because the hot steam could cause some damages on the wool). From time to time, you can expose the rug to direct sunlight in a sunny day.
Size: ( 243cm x 158cm ) ( 95.6" x 62.2" inches ) ( 7.97ft x 5.18ft )
Also, don't forget to follow us on Instagram to keep up to date with our latest rugs, plus, see how we weave, clean, treat… our rugs! Find us: @moroccanlooms
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(via Malachite | Luke Irwin Rugs – lukeirwin)
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ROSETTE
“A rosette is a horizontal cross section of a flower,” notes Albright. Imagine a circular form viewed from above.
From Wikipedia:
In botany, a rosette is a circular arrangement of leaves or of structures resembling leaves. In flowering plants, rosettes usually sit near the soil. Their structure is an example of a modified stem in which the internode gaps between the leaves do not expand, so that all the leaves remain clustered tightly together and at a similar height.
Many plant families have varieties with rosette morphology; they are particularly common in Asteraceae (such as dandelions), Brassicaceae (such as cabbage), and Bromeliaceae.
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