Early Turkoman narrow tent band, two lengths totalling 21ft approx. Circa 1880.
Hand knotted geometric designs with silk highlights on plain cotton white warp-faced (plain-weave ground). The elaborate design is hand knotted with high pile on ivory flat woven background. The silk pile is primarily a golden-yellow color with a small number of magenta knots. The dyes to the hand-spun wool have been applied skillfully. Extremely finely woven and of high quality. Rare and early survivor from the height of Karakalpak material culture.
Condition: Good condition with a few smallholes in the ground, areas of rebound sides and couple of patch supports. Original tassles with some fraying. Some trace of dye bleeding onto the white cotton ground commensurate with age.
Includes two lengths from same tent band, totalling 21 feet approx:
Dimensions:
11 feet: 335cm long x 18cm wide
10 feet: 317cm long x 18cm wide
* The Karakalpaks made a range of decorative tent bands to join, sup
...port and decorate the wooden frame of the yurt. The largest (and widest) was the qizil basqur, which constrained the base of the yurt roof. This was made from a mixture of natural goat hair and red sheep''s wool. The smallest bands were the short lengths of dizbe, used to tie the qanats and other wooden components of the yurt together. In between were other bands, such as the ishki beldew, and the numerous qizil qur and aq qur, which together fasten the felt roof parts to the frame. The qizil qur holds down the front roof section while the aq qur hold down the rear roof section.
** The bands were decorated with a knotted pile that only partially covered the cotton ground of the tent band. The main colours used were brown, beige, and salmon pink, while secondary colours included black, blue, pistachio green, and golden yellow. In combination technique the knot cannot be tied across adjacent warps, as with a normal all-piled carpet. This is because the tight packing of the warps does not leave sufficient space for normal knotting. Instead the weaver uses just half of the available warps, forming the shed and then tying a knot on only the raised set of warps. The knot is therefore tied across a warp and its neighbour but one. This can only be done using a symmetric knot. After inserting the cotton weft the shed is changed and knots can be tied on the other set of warps. The two rows of knots are offset by one warp. In this technique the spare warps must float behind the knot, concealing its underneath from view. As a consequence, combination technique tent bands appear to have a plain cotton back.
Internal Reference: D:006009
Antique ID Number (AIDN): SA1140294
Dateline of this antique is 1880
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