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Navajo weavings, rugs and blankets
buyers' guide
Good quality Navajo weavings are heirloom investments,
and will increase in value. Taos Trading Post does not trade antique
Navajo blankets and weavings,
consequently this guide is not for the buyer of elderly Native American
rugs and merchandise; who is well
advised to research his find before
spending hundreds or thousands of dollars, since Native
American Indian rugs and blankets are not all valuable because
they are old. We specialize in contemporary
authentic high quality good to fine Navajo
weavings, and the risk
is less for investors in contemporary weaving. Quality, value and
authenticity are more
easily established. Additionally, it has become customary to attach
documentation to Navajo weavings, in the form of a wired price
tag bearing information about the weaver and her rug design.
It is futile to pursue exacting standards in evaluating Native
American Indian rugs and blankets. The charm of the art form is its individuality.
Appreciation of a particular work
of Indian art may be further blurred by that indefinable element
termed taste. The general rule for all art collection also applies to Navajo
weavings.
Buy what
you like and will enjoy for a long time. Beyond that:
When assessing a Navajo rug, open it fully and lay it out
flat. Disregard temporary wrinkles or creases, since they will be present if
the rugs
have been folded and
stacked for a long time. Only by examining a weaving in its entirety on both
sides, can a buyer be sure there are no significant defects and that edges
are parallel, straight and square at the corners. The corners should not curl.
Fold the weaving lengthwise and widthwise to ensure the opposite sides are
the same, or nearly so. Colors should be uniform, particularly within design
basics.
Is the weave the same thickness throughout? Quality Navajo
weavings can be coarse or fine, but it is always consistent. Warp threads should
not show
through. If
they do, something went wrong in the weaving. The loom lost its tension, perhaps,
or the weaver was a novice. Tightness and consistency of the weave is detected
most certainly by feel.
The Navajo vertical loom, imparting great tension to the foundation
cords during weaving, produces a tightly packed weave. Native American Indian
rugs and blankets that are simulations, are frequently woven on horizontal
looms operated mechanically, and are looser both of warp and weft. The odor
of sheep is often present in Navajo handspun Native American rugs and is absent
in imitations. Of course, the smell of sheep is also lacking in Navajo Native
American
rugs employing commercial yarns.
No Navajo textile is perfect. Slight flaws or personal embellishments
are acceptable so long as they do not diminish or detract from the overall
production.
'Lazy lines' are commonly found in excellent weaves. These diagonal lines in
the material are created when a weaver carries her weft back and forth across
one section of the warps, usually if she is weaving a textile of greater width
than her reach so she need not shift her position with every weft. The lines
are considered normal. Remember,
buy what
you like
and will
enjoy
for
a long
time.
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