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kilim |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.04 sec. |
kilimPileless floor covering handwoven by tapestry techniques in Anatolia, the Balkans, and parts of Iran. The name is also given to a variety of brocaded, embroidered, warp-faced, and other flat-woven rugs and bags. A common characteristic is a slit that occurs wherever two colours meet along a vertical line in the pattern. The finest examples are silk 16th–17th-century pieces from Kashan, Iran. The largest kilims are produced in Turkey, as are smaller examples and prayer kilims (prayer rugs); Turkish weavers often use cotton for the white areas, and small details may be brocaded. The kilims of the southern Balkans, originally copies of Turkish types, gradually developed individual styles. Kilims become progressively less Asian in colour and pattern as the distance from Turkey increases. |
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| The volume consists of 49 selections, including an array of detailed paisleys with panel stripe coordinates, ikats, kilim rug designs, houndstooth textures, and a plush "Missoni" geometric. Expect to come away with a bargain (a gorgeous handmade 60-year-old kilim in the Kurds' favored orange will run you about $100)--and an earful from this English-speaking capitalist entrepreneur who still extols the virtues of Syrian socialism. More recent cultural interchange is revealed in the name kilim tarabulsiy ("Tripolitanian kilim") given to woolen cloths with distinctive geometric motifs woven in the region of Redeyef in southwestern Tunisia. |
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