Jozan rug
Jozan rugs are made in the surroundings of the village Jozan in the Iranian Malayer area. Jozan rugs are quality rugs of the Sarouk type often with designs similar to early 20th century Sarouks.[1] Jozan rugs are often called Jozan Sarouk or Malayer Sarouk in trade.[2] In recent production the finer qualities are labelled Jozan and the less finer knotted are labelled Malayer.
They are double-wefted on a cotton foundation.[1]
References
- ^ a b Stone, Peter F. (1997). The oriental rug lexicon. Seattle : University of Washington Press. p. 114. ISBN 978-0-295-97574-0.
- ^ Allane, Lee (1988). Oriental rugs : a buyer's guide. New York : Thames and Hudson. p. 129. ISBN 978-0-500-27517-7.
- v
- t
- e
Rugs and carpets
- Arabian
- Afghan
- Alcaraz
- Azerbaijani
- Absheron
- Aghajly
- Arraiolos
- Arran
- Borchaly
- Caucasian
- Chul
- Demirchilar
- Ganja
- Gasimushaghi
- Jek
- Karabakh
- Kilim
- Quba
- Shabalyt-Buta
- Shedde
- Bessarabian
- Braided
- Catalogne
- Chobi
- Dhurrie
- Flokati
- Kashmiri
- Lilihan
- Mughal
- Navajo
- Oriental
- Pakistani
- Petate
- Persian
- Rya
- Scandinavian
- Seychour
- Tibetan
- Turkmen
- Uzbek
- Yürük
- Azerbaijan Carpet Museum
- Carpet Museum of Iran
- Dar al Athar al Islamiyyah
- Brukenthal National Museum
- Kidderminster
- Louvre
- Mevlana Museum
- Metropolitan Museum of Art
- Miho Museum
- Museum of Applied Arts (Budapest)
- Museum of Applied Arts, Vienna
- Museum of Islamic Art, Doha
- Museo Poldi Pezzoli
- Museum of Textiles (Lyon)
- Museum of Islamic Art, Berlin
- Saint Louis Art Museum
- Textile Museum (George Washington University)
- Turkish and Islamic Arts Museum
- Turkmen Carpet Museum
- Victoria and Albert Museum
- Wilton
and installation
carpets
This Iran-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e