Tabriz Souf rug was hand knotted in China of 100 percent natural wool, with silk highlights on a cotton foundation. This rug has full wool piles and is in like new condition. This rug is a Souf meaning that there are six raised areas at either end. This rug has knots per square inch in excess of 300+. Beautiful colors with excellent quality. No holes or repairs, nice and soft. This rug was acquired from a Metro Washington DC estate. Clean and ready to be enjoyed. FLAT RATE SHIPPING OF $150.00 FOR THIS RUG WITHIN THE CONTINENTAL UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. Flat rate shipping is billed separately after the invoice has been paid. Please see all of our rugs and other items at www.rug-auction.com. We ship too. A Certificate of Authenticity can be provided after the sale for an additional $25. A fair market appraisal can be provided after the sale for an additional $75.
Tabriz rugs refer to a well-known design of Persian rugs from the city and surrounding area of Tabriz in northwest Iran. After Persian rugs became unavailable to Americans during the Islamic Revolution in the 1980s, India responded by producing increasingly better rugs. In 1980, the finest quality rugs produced in India were woven with 90 knots per square inch. Today Indian weavers make rugs with 240 knots per square inch and more. During the ’80s and ’90s, India established its capacity to make first-rate rugs with excellent materials. Most are in Persian designs, with good synthetic dyes and machine-spun wool. They are so successful, and in many cases such bargains, that they have become the staple fare of rug stores and department stores throughout America. At one time, there were only a handful of designs in which Indian carpets were woven, but today there are hundreds — so many, in fact, that I can only survey a fraction of them. Because so many businesses import mainstream Indian rugs, retailers rarely mention their names to customers. The mainstream Indian rugs, with knot counts of from nearly 100 to 200 or more per square inch, are so consistent that, for the consumer, choosing from among them will come down to a matter of common sense and personal taste.