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Fall Deco

Deco Rugs: A Touch beyond the Oriental
When was the last time you thought of buying a rug for your living room and decided not to since you were short of money?
Ever heard of deco rugs? That’s right! An elegant blend of beauty and richness, these rugs are affordable and easily available, whichever part of the globe you are.
So what are deco rugs? Where did they spring from?
Deco rugs are manufactured in factories and are cheaper than the Oriental rugs. They changed the very concepts of rug making and designing at the World’s Fair Exhibition of Modern and Industrial Decorative Art that was conducted at Paris in 1925. Nobody could predict that it would be creating a revolution in the arena of decorative art. Among those who got inspired by the event were designers, weavers, craftsmen, etc. As they created a major contrast and provided a change from the Oriental rugs in pattern, design and colours, they soon became the favourite of the masses.
Art deco rugs were a major eye-opener to the interior designers all over the world. For the first time in history beautiful and colourful rugs and carpets could be afforded by the common man. Till then, the meaning of rugs was the elegant and rich Oriental rugs that could be afforded only by the rich and famous.
Deco rugs are different from Oriental ones in many ways. Here are a few characteristics of deco rugs that make them stand apart.
• If you want a lively ambience you’ll get rugs that have bold colours like bright red or blue, emerald green, canary yellow, royal violet, etc.
• If your requirement is a modern and subdued interior you’ll get monochromatic colour schemes like gray, pale blue or beige.
• Another sign of a deco rug is one with black and white colour combination that gives a zebra appearance. This is a very modern pattern suitable for modern interiors.
• Geometric or angular patterns are common designs on these rugs. They are a total contrast from the floral designs of the antique rugs. The rare floral designs on the them are almost often asymmetrical.
• Egyptian signs and symbols are another characteristic pattern of the rugs.
• They are normally very plush and thick unlike the thinner and harder Oriental ones.
• Repeating patterns like lines or squares is also one of their peculiar features.
• These rugs are normally made of wool or silk, sometimes a combination of both.
Deco rugs are very much sought after now as they suit the modern ambience and culture. Those woven around mid-1920s to 30s (also called the Machine age) reflect the style precisely. Jean Michel Frank and Emile Jacques Ruhlmann are two French designers who could be considered the most creative of Art deco rug designers.
Though the art met with a temporary fall during the Great Depression of 1929, it revived very soon. The genuine are very rare now and therefore highly expensive. However, you could get pieces of the revival age that were made as homage to the authentic rugs. They are a clear result of bold steps where different genres are blended beautifully, contrasting styles are used to accentuate diversity, simultaneously creating harmony.
Deco rugs are now highly in demand since they go well with many corporate buildings that are blooming in every part of the globe. The rug industry of today owes a great deal to the these rugs as they served to bring rugs and carpets within the reach of common man.
About the Author
To get more information about high quality and most beautiful carpets from a wide range of antique as well as custom made contemporary designs.
http://www.dorisleslieblau.com
is my deco ceiling dropping as fasteners pull through plasterboard?
I am renovating a recently purchased 1930s apartment. The ceiling is very nicely decorated across the face of the old plasterboard (the plasterboard is the old type with hessian fibre running through the middle of it) and has cool cornices too.
There are now many little divots (about 1cm cirle) in lines where i imagine the josits run. I think the sanding of the ceiling has encouraged the plaster boards to drop down a bit, and where the fastener is pulling through the boards the divot is created in the paintwork over the fastener.
Is this common, is my ceiling going to fall in, what do I do about it?
Thanks for any suggestions.
Well, whether the ceiling WILL fall down ius about as easy to predict as the weather.
But if you are concerned, you could add more plaster board screws along the joist lines, BUT THIS TIME, add large stainless steel washers (something not all builders do on a ceiling, but I would....)
The problem is: If your ceiling has already sunken a bit, then pushing it back up (if that works at all) could most likely cause cracks where the joint compound had been applied.....
Couture Deco wallpaper collection Fall / Winter 2011


