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CARPETS
by REGION
 
Turkish carpets devided
into some category shown below. You can find here information
and gif files about them. Please look them inside to discover
beauty on carpets.
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Hereke Carpets:
They are easily noted once one learns to
"read" or recognize the patterns or designs and
colours associated with the geographical area in which produced.
the finest contemporary and highest quality of silk and wool
carpets currently made in Turkey are produced in town near
Istanbul, called Hereke. The
Hereke carpets are either woven in pure
silk or cotton and wool.
The pure silk carpet uses silk from Bursa. In wool and cotton
carpets the warps and welfts are cotton and the best quality of
wool is used d-for knoots in the pile.
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Hereke
Pure Silk & Wool on Cotton |

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The silk Hereke carpets
has from 1.0 to 1.2 million knots per square meter. The knot
density in the highest quality wool carpets is any where between
360,000 to 400,000 knots per square meter. In second quality
wool carpets the knots are around 250,000 to 300,000 per square
meter. The dominant colours in Hereke carpets are dark blue,
cream and cinnamon and occasionally yellow and green are used.
The treditional floral designs are common and each design has
its own name, such as : Seljuk Star, Seven Mountain Flowers,
Ploneise, 101 Flowers, and Tulip. The flowers in the design and
the hormany of colours add warth to a home. |
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| Kayseri
Carpets: The
town of Kayseri, situated in central Turkey, has been famous as
a carpet making center for centuries. Carpets and Kilims of
Kayseri are of various types. Silk carpets, Wool on cotton and
natural wool (no dyes), and Bunyan carpets are the major
categories produced. Kayseri carpets are woven both at the
workshops and in the homes. Weavers usually buy yarn from shops
and after finishing their carpet would sell it to the same shop
in order to buy more yarn. This carpets are considered the
masterpieces of Kayseri and as such are sought out by dealers to
sell to the foreign trade. Sometimes Kayseri carpets are woven
entirelly in silk and will have 600,000 to 700,000 knots per
square meter.
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Kayseri Pure silk & Kayseri Wool
on Cotton
( bünyan ) |

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Kayseri Wool on
Cotton carpets are offen in floral designs of a typical Oriental
carpet. The yarn is cotton and wool dyed with wegetible dyes,
and about 120,000 to 150,000 knots per square meter.The Kayseri
Bunyan carpets are made in different sizes; from pillow sizes of
62 by 100 cm. to the large 16 square meters carpet. Kayseri
natural wool carpets have all the properties of Bunyan carpets
execpt there are not as many colours used as in the Kayseri
Bunyan carpets. Colours of white, cream, light and dark brown
and sometimes black are used in this types of carpets with the
same number knots as in the Kayseri Bunyan carpets. |
| Ladik
Carpets:
Ladik is a town located north of Konya in the hearth of
Anatolia. The main sources of income in this area are
animal husbandary, agrigalture and carpet production.
Konya and Ladik are the oldest carpet making centers in
Turkey. Even during the 15th. center the art of carpet
weaving florished in Konya becouse it was the capital of
the Seljuk Empire and a very important cominication and
political center. There are many notible at works an
konya and perhaps the most famous in the Green Mosque.
From Arabia, Iran and other countries many artists came
to Konya to practice their crafts. The surviving carpets
of this era offer ample evidence of the Turkish
character. During this same period carpet weaving skils
pread from Konya to other parts of Anatolia. The colours
in Ladik carpets are very vivid and vell matched. After
Kula carpets, Ladik carpets, with their 250,000 knots
per square meter, are considered just as fine. |

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| Dosemealti-Antalya
Carpets: These
carpets are made by Yoruk's semi-nomadic tribes who
leave near the ocean on the warm plains during the
winter months. The willages are arround Antalya, on the
Mediterranean cost, are the main producing centers of
this type of carpets are made with wool and dyes
produced by the nomads themselfs. The predominant
colours are always bright red and dark blue, with a
smaller amount of white. Distinctive patterns in the
borders are the sheep's eye and knife tip and the
"hands on hips" motif, an age old symbol
denoting female fertility which dates back to the time
when the tribes worshipped mader goddesses. The field
are usually are taken up by a large red double mihrab,
edged in ram's horn motif. Often the shape of the double
mihrap is cut into by two triangles on either side. Ears
of grain representing fertility and carnetions are
frequently seen. If there is a tree of life it's
generally made up of carnetions, "the flowers of
the people". Some times one can see a strange
motif, a stylized representation of the human figure
which is used to guard against evil. The number of knots
in these carpets are equal to 160,000 knots per square
meter.
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| Kars
Carpets: Kars
is located near the Russian border of Turkey, produces
carpets designed in the caucasian style. The main motif
used is the large crucilform. The quiet olive-green
combin&d with~a dull red-brown and lighter beige
tones give the piece an enormous warmth. The eight
stylized trees of life in the corners are surrounded by
a Caucasian calyx-and-leaf border and the guard stripes
are called 'running dogs." The extremely valuable
hand-spun mountain wool is used in the hand weaving and
is especially prized by acknowledged buyers. Natural
dyed wool is used with the dominate cdours navy blue,
red and cream. There are 200.000 knots per square meter
in Kars carpet's and for this reason Kars carpets are so
noted fine works of art.
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| Kozak
Carpets: Kozak
carpets are woven by semi-nomadic shepherds who live in
the highland regions of the Caucasus mountains and their
environment is reflected in their products. The
distinctive designs in Kozak Carpets can be easily
recognized. The warp and weft threads are wool with the
weft threads always in red or brown colours. The wool
pile in these carpets is fairly deep and the yarn used
is always of excellent quality. The Kozak carpet has
approximately 50 to 100 Turkish knots per square inch.
The motifs used in these carpets are, formal, geometric,
central medallion, repeated pattern and
"Eagle." True kozak carpets are mostly antique
pieces and were produced in the Caucasus Mountains.
Currently a limited number of Kozak carpets are produced
and are much prized by dealers.
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| Kula
Carpets : Kula
is the name of a town in Western Anatolia where these
wool carpets are made. The willage carpets of Kula are
woven on a woolen warp and weft and for the most part
have strong geometric designs. The colours are rich but
soft with earth tones of rust, green, gold, and blue
being common, however, the dominant colours are pastel.
The most important characteristics of these carpets are
that they are woven with 100% wool yarn and have varying
patterns, colours and sizes. Kula carpets contain
160,000 knots per square meter. Alaong with all Kula
patterns various Anatolian patterns are frequently seen
in Kula carpet. Kula carpets resemble those of other
Western Anatolian products like, Usak and Gordes, with
their wide borders restrained colours.
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| Milas
Carpets: Milas
is the center of a weaving area in Western Turkey near
Izmir. It gives its name to all the carpets produced in
the region. Those made in the immediate area of Milas
are different in style to those made in the South-west
Peninsula, around the center of Karaova. There are four
sub-types which constitute the Milas family,' the prayer
carpet with the losenge shaped niche, the bright red
medallion Milas, the antique Milas which is woven in
shades of red-brown and yellow and the Ada Milas which
is quite restrained in design. The prayer rugs are the
most important sub-type, with their unusual shaped
Mihrab, elongated, terminating in a losenge,
representing the immortality of the soul. Carpets from
no other region have Mihrabs in this shape. there are
approximately 160.000 knots per square meter in the
Milas carpets.
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| Taspinar
Carpets: Taspinar
is a small hamlet in the carpet weaving areas of the
Nigde. Nigde is one of the main roads that cross the
Taurus Mountains. Taspinar produces excellent carpet of
a thick pile, knotted in high quality wool. They have a
prodominantly blue and red field enlivened by delicate
motifs in lighter shades. The yarn is dyed with natural
vegitable dyes by the Caucasian methods. Taspinar
carpets are amoung the most beatifull of all Anatolian
carpets. In the old Taspinar's carpets the Persian
influence can be seen which are plant figures and
geometric designs used simultanously. However, the rich
colours and beautifully proportioned somewhat formal
design prevent this unusual mixture from thispleasing
the eye. Well cared for, old Taspinars have a vonderfull
silk like quality. As the lanolin in the wool rises to
the surface it gives the pile a soft rich velvety sheen.
New taspinars are made in the same rich colours as old
ones, but the designs are becoming more varied.
Caucasian and nimadic pattern have become more regular
in recent years. The knot density of Taspinar carpets
are 140,000 per square meter.
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| Yahyali
Carpets: These
carpets, made in the vicinity of Kayseri are of a very
fine quality and are considered very attractive. A rich
red with indigo coloured blue is used throughout the
field with a border of brilliant shades of yellow and
gold. This carpets are very popular, because of the
traditional flawless workmanship of the Yahyali weavers.
The main ornamental motif of a contemperary and atique
Yahyali is the hexagon which is smilar to those of the
Yoruk carpets, but they are more linear in execution. A
double hexagon encloses a light blue centerpieces. The
hexagon may be single, double or triple. Most Yahyali
carpets have these common caracteristics. A main border
with stylized flowers and an "old gold"
ground, surrounded by two lesser borders with a dark
blue ground. The main field is nearly always red, with a
blue medallion and corner pieces, which have stepped
edges. The warm colour harmony and beatifull designs
along with good quality maka the Yahyali carpets one of
the most popular carpets of Anatolia. The number of
knots in Yahyali carpets are equal to the number of
Milas carpest (140,000 knots per square meter).
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| Yagcibedir
Carpets: Yagcibedir
carpets are produced in the mountainous areas of the
Aegean regions, in the nomad inhabited villages of
Mazilar, Islamlar, Karakecili, Yenikoy, Karaoba and
Kocaoba (the oba ending means 'nomad tent").
According to the legend Yagcibedir was a butter seller
from Kayseri who made excellent quality carpets to
supplement his income. He shared his skills with the
people of the villages he visited, so when they started
to produce, they named their carpets after him. The
warp, weft and knots are made of pure lambswool, and the
pile is clipped short to allow the pattern to be clearly
seen. The dominant colours are dark indigo blue and rich
madder red, sometimes with the inclusion of cream,
brown, softer shades of red and pinks. As the carpets
age they become more and more lovely, as the dark reds
fade to a beautiful softred-brown. The colours and
patterns of Yagcibedir carpets have remained the same
for countless generations. They are very distinctive and
easy to recognize. The dark blue ground is patterned
with geometric forms: stars, flowers, stylized birds and
numerous stars of Suleyman. The field is framed by a
border of five or seven bands. The double ended prayer
niche, which indicates that the weavers were Shi-ite
Moslems, is very distinctive with an edge of three
stepped lines, ending in a ram's horn motif. These
carpets are often the favorites of male carpet lovers,
due to the masculine colours and simple geometric
designs. The knots density in these carets are 160.000
per square meter.
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Carpet &
Jewellery
Address: Nuruosmaniye No.100 Cagaloglu
34440 Istanbul / TURKEY
Tel: +90 212 512 1755 - 528 6937 Fax: +90 212 513 3262 e-mail: orient@orientjewel.com |