750.00 €
A striking vintage Adreskand Baluch felt or namad from Afghanistan, featuring a checkered main field in a vibrant palette of fuchsia, purple, and orange.
What makes this rug particularly surprising is the proportion of the design: the main field is relatively small, while the two broad borders occupy as much space as the central area, creating a powerful and dramatic composition. This effect is enhanced by a narrow, dark inner border, two small dark triangles, and a large outer dark border, which together provide a bold contrast to the cheerful, lively colors of the felt.
Material: 100% hand-spun sheep wool
Size: 250×200 cms
Origin: Baluch tribe, Adreskand, Afghanistan
Date of weaving: 1970s
Felt (Mid. and New. Pers., namad), material produced by process of felting, the entanglement of animal fiber in all directions, appropriately done to form a soft and homogeneous mass. The technique was originally devised in nomadic communities of Central Asia, spreading toward China and the Greek world well before the 3rd century B.C.E., but for a long time confined to the Asian continent.
The method of felt-making, rather simple and uniform, constitutes the basis for a large number of products currently in use. As is often the case, the banality of the phenomenon have contributed to leading researchers astray; the techniques, usages, and aesthetics of felt appear, therefore, to be relatively unknown, particularly in comparison to those of what is perceived as the more “noble” craft of weaving.
Production. The main primary substances used in the production of felt are camel and sheep wool (preferably that of autumn, the second shearing season, and of lamb wool, which are finer), goat’s underhair taken from the animal by combing, which produces felt of a higher quality.
Most felts are made out of white, beige, brown, gray, or black natural wool. In addition, some types of light-colored felts can be more or less highly decorated. Several methods, applied at different stages of production, are available: before soaking, tufts of wool dyed in advance can be applied to achieve the desired motifs; before the felt has dried, designs can be made with dye; after drying the felt can be embroidered, decoratively cut, or embossed
Felt is produced to some extent everywhere, either within the household—a situation prevalent in rural areas, where men and women work together, generally under the direction of women—or in the context of exercising a craft: professional felt-makers, generally men, are grouped together in specialized neighborhoods or bāzārs, Their activity is often seasonal, and they may move from one town to another.
Felts (namad) are true artistic creations, born from the imagination and sensitivity of the women who make them. Unlike carpets or kilims, where the warp and weft impose a rigid structure, felt offers total freedom of form and composition.
In the felting process, wool is transformed through pressure, water, and movement — but also through the creative energy of women’s hands. The artists can draw directly with fiber, layer colors, improvise abstract or figurative motifs, and let the material speak for itself.
Thus, felts are not only functional objects but also spaces of personal and collective expression, where women give form to their inner world, their natural surroundings, and their cultural memory — free from the technical constraints of weaving.
Additional information
| Weight | 750 kg |
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