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  Home > Kilim Guide > Weaves

 

 

Weaves


 

Middle Eastern nomads and villagers have used a variety of techniques to create stunning textile art.  The most common structures are shown below.

 

Slit tapestry this is the technique used most frequently for the flat woven rugs and hangings called kilims. Slit tapestry is also used for bags, pictorial tapestries, and other articles.  The fabrics are usually weft-faced, meaning that the warp is covered completely; the surface is ribbed in a vertical direction.  Warp yarns are those that were affixed to the loom; weft yarns are those that were interlaced with the warps. In all of the photos here, the fabrics are oriented as they were on the loom--with the warps running vertically.

 

In tapestry weaving, weft yarns are discontinuous; the artisan interlaces each colored weft back and forth in its own small pattern area.  With slit tapestry, at each point where colors meet, a small slit occurs if the pattern boundary is vertical.  Other tapestry techniques, in which wefts are dovetailed or interlocked, overcome this potential problem but have their own disadvantages.  Slit tapestry produces the sharpest pattern delineation and the smoothest weave.  It also permits the most freedom and spontaneity; thus it is a favorite technique among  weavers worldwide.  Slit tapestry is fun to weave.

 

Turkish Kilim Weavers

You can see in the loom photo that slit-tapestry kilims are woven in separate sections, in a very free-form sort of way.  Rarely are pattern parts woven with single wefts, one and then another, right across the loom.  Usually tapestry designs are bolder and more dramatic than those produced with other nomadic weaving techniques. 

 

Since the weaver avoids long vertical lines in her pattern (to avoid long slits), designs are composed primarily of diagonal and horizontal elements.  To construct a strong piece, intersecting diagonal pattern lines are also avoided.  Because most kilim designs have been shaped significantly by structural considerations, most tapestry motifs have developed directly on the loom; they have not been copied from other sources.  This is why we find designs similar in character wherever slit tapestry is produced around the world--whether by Anatolian, Navajo, Pre-Columbian Peruvian, or other weavers. 

 

Tapestry weft yarns need not always be horizontal.  They can be pushed about as the weaver wishes, to easily form curved or slanting shapes.  Egyptian weavers who put animals, plants, and human figures into their tapestries use the same techniques as Anatolian, Persian, and Caucasian kilim weavers, but simply do not restrict themselves to geometric or quasi-geometric forms. When we compare Senneh kilims from western Iran which have erratic wefts, with the Harranian folk art tapestries of Egypt, the structural similarities are striking. 

 

Weavers sometimes choose to weave slit-tapestry pieces sideways.  The loom's width is always a limitation, but the direction can also be shifted for design purposes.  An Egyptian artist who wishes to portray a group of long-legged animals and still avoid long slits, logically produces her piece sideways on the loom.  Indeed, the internal rhythm in such pieces is nearly always dominated by a verticality in the designs.  On the other hand, pieces woven right-side-up display a predominance of horizontal forms, as shown in the photo above.  When tapestries like these are designed directly on the loom, with no preliminary drawings, the natural tapestry processes help to shape graceful imagery.

 

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