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Dr Ali Asghar Shirzai, Mr Davood Shadlou,
Volume 5, Issue 14 (3-2010)
Abstract

Regarding the design, pattern and color of Timurid carpets, although no sound and safe one of such period has been survived, there are so many paintings addressing the carpets that most probably have been produced in that time. These paintings are mostly accessible from various manuscripts that have been developed by Timurid princes and patrons. We can even reproduce a whole carpet by analyzing these paintings. One of such manuscripts was created in Harat in the royal library of Baysonghor Mirza under supervising of Ja’far Tabrizi and is dated back to 1429, namely “Shanameh-ye-Baysonghori”. In this paper we are going to analyze six paintings of the manuscript, and to determine the design, pattern, color and even designers of Timurid carpets. This research is descriptive-analytical in nature and its necessity is due to understanding the carpets of the past eras and introducing them to designers and artists of nowadays carpet industry.

Dr Seyed Ali Mojabi, Mrs Zahra Fanaee,
Volume 6, Issue 15 (6-2010)
Abstract

The manufacturing of costly hand woven rugs and floor coverings during the 15th to 17th centuries represented a splendid golden age for the Iranian textile industry. Without using high-quality yarns, the productions of such woven materials were surely impossible. To analyze and identify the technical specifications of the required yarns in this industry during the aforementioned centuries, the remaining products not only could be analyzed, but they also could be examined in the great works of the paintings of that era. Examining the 15th to 17th centuries main paintings in which spinning were manifested, characteristics and technical specification of spinning handicrafts within this period have been determined. The collected data revealed that spinning, which was done by the middle-aged, elderly, and disabled as one of their daily activities, used to be very common during the 15th to 17th centuries. The painters, carefully portraying the various parts of the spindle and the spinning wheel in their works, were completely aware of the yarn source and their technical differences in spinning different yarns. This could be clearly observed in their works. According to the social situation of the painting context and with emphasis on the specific considerations of the various instruments usage, special use was made of various types of spindles and spinning wheels. 


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