Carpet - Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A carpet is a rectangular piece of woven textile.
Generally, carpets are used to make spaces more beautiful and to make walking on the floor quieter. Carpets are warmer and softer than hard floors such as hardwood, tile, or concrete. Carpets may be many different sizes.
Rugs and carpets originated in Central Asia, but the idea of machine manufacture was invented in Europe. The oldest known carpet was found in the year of 1947 at excavations in Siberia. So there are two different kinds of things: one is hand-made by traditional methods, and the other woven by machine. This accounts for the very great difference in style and price between traditional rugs and modern wall-to-wall carpeting.
The name "carpet" comes from Old Italian carpita, "carpire" means to pluck.[1] The term "carpet" is used mostly to describe textiles placed on the floor most of the times stretched from wall to wall.
Rugs are smaller in size, often placed over a carpet, and often decorated. In Islam, rugs are used as prayer mats, for people to kneel on when they pray.
It is common, especially in the Middle East, for rugs and carpets to be used as wall decoration, and they are designed with decoration in mind.[2] Mass-manufactured carpets in western countries are utilitarian: for hard use on the floor, and usually self-coloured (that is one color over the whole carpet). Traditional rugs from the Middle East are hand-made and may be very expensive by the time they reach shops in the western world.
In some countries carpets are designed in a way to tell stories. They can tell history of family or something important that happened.
References
[change | change source]- ↑ "Definition of CARPET". www.merriam-webster.com.
- ↑ Ford P.R.J. 1981. Oriental carpet design: a guide to traditional patterns an symbols. London: Thanes & Hudson. ISBN 0-500-23328-4