A Brief History Of Rugs
The history of the manufacturing of rugs and carpets begins
with weaving. Early weaving began with baskets and crude mats made from
grasses, leaves and reeds. The first spinning and weaving of shorn sheep
and goat hair occurred at least as early at 6000 BC, according to excavations
near the Caspian Sea.
The first true carpets, with pile, were probably rough cured skins
that early hunters used as floor covering in their crude dwellings.
Modem carpets still consist of the basic elements of a tough flexible
backing, upright pile, agreeable to the touch and protection from cold
hard floors.
The Egyptians wove linen and woolen carpets in the 3rd millennium BC.
The influence of the Egyptian carpets spread to Mongolia and China.
A Turkish knotted rug was found in Siberia in the 1950's and was dated
back to 500 BC.
Early Chinese carpets were made of knotted silk pile and backings of
wool or cotton. Later the Chinese developed the use of wool pile production.
Nomadic Central Asian tribes also developed the use of weaving wool
rugs. These rugs were woven on simple horizontal frames that were easily
rolled up for traveling.
Early Looms were composed of two forked branches joined by a crosspiece.
A wooden bar was used to flatten the binding threads. The early weavers
used natural colors at first. Gradually they reamed to dye the fibers
with colors made from vegetable, flower and insect materials.
During the Middle Ages, Italian merchants brought oriental rugs to
Europe where they were first used as wall coverings. By the year 1600
there was a powerful guild of weavers in France. In 1608 Henry IV of
France set up looms in the Louvre.
In England carpet weavers were chartered in the towns of Wilton and
Axminister in 1701. About 1740 carpet weaving was established at Kidderminister.
By 1830 a British Parliamentary paper declared that 1/28 of the wool
produced in the United Kingdom was carpet wool.
Richard Arkwright invented a machine called the flyer spinning flame
in 1769. This machine spun thread onto a bobbin. Ten years later Samuel
Crompton introduced the "spinning mule" which spun 1000 threads
at a time. In 1787 the first steam powered loom appeared and weaving
had become an automated process. By 1839 the steam powered loom process
was being used in the manufacture of carpet. The power loom first appeared
in the United States in 1841. The invention of the Axminister loom in
1876 stimulated the carpet manufacturing industry by permitting an unlimited
range of color and design in carpets. Axminister and Wilton woven carpets
now (1992) account for only 3% of the carpet sold in the United States.
Today, most carpet production (94%) is tufted carpet. Tufted carpet
is produced 15 times faster than woven carpet. The faster production
time greatly reduces the labor costs during the carpet manufacturing
process.
In order to achieve dimensional stability in tufted carpet it is necessary
to apply two layers of "backing" (double-backed tufted carpet)
to the carpet. The backing directly beneath the pile yam is called the
"primary" backing. Attached to the primary backing by a layer
of rubber or latex is the "secondary" backing. The original
backing on tufted carpet was "jute." Jute is a natural burlap
that when over-wet was subject to shrinkage, dry-rot and seam popping.
Presently, the backing of tufted carpet is made from a synthetic material
called polypropylene (olefin). Polypropylene backing will not accept
moisture so the shrinkage, dry-rot and seam popping associated with
jute backing is impossible; even if the carpet is over-wetted in the
cleaning process.