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Conserve, clean, repair: Keeping those carpets gorgeous

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  • Conserve, clean, repair: Keeping those carpets gorgeous

    Dallas Morning News , TX
    Oct 21 2004

    Conserve, clean, repair: Keeping those carpets gorgeous


    The Oriental Rug Cleaning Co., founded in 1911 by Hagop Amirkhan and
    run for 30 years by his son, noted carpet expert Mirza Amirkhan, is
    under the stewardship of granddaughter Ellen Amirkhan. She is a
    third-generation expert on cleaning, conservation, restoration and
    appraisal with a booming Texas accent. As a member of the
    International Society of Appraisers (certified in Orientals), she
    travels the country teaching classes on the fine art of rug cleaning
    and restoration.

    Grandfather Amirkhan fled Turkey during the Armenian genocide. To pay
    for his passage, he worked as a rug cleaner for a cousin in
    Cincinnati. After a year, he struck out on his own. He chose Dallas
    because in 1911, fine rugs were already plentiful and experienced
    cleaners were not.

    In addition to rug cleaning and repair work, the Amirkhans also sell,
    appraise and restore. While almost any rug can be repaired (a rug
    with colors that have bled extensively is "a lost cause"), Ms.
    Amirkhan is conscientious about what should and should not be done.

    Repairs and restoration may mean setting in patches cannibalized from
    other rugs, knotting, reweaving or remounting on a second fabric
    backing. Proper technique is crucial to re-create, as closely as
    possible, the original rug. Expert repair and restoration can
    actually increase the value of a fairly battered rug.

    To that end, Ellen Amirkhan has trained three women in the art of
    knotting. "Such reweaving is charged by the job because more densely
    knotted rugs are more difficult to do." In contrast, a dog-chewed
    fringe can be relatively easy to replace (about $12 a linear foot).
    How best to maintain a rug? Ms. Amirkhan says that not vacuuming may
    be the most damaging myth. "Eighty percent of the soil in rugs is dry
    particulate matter. If you don't vacuum, it's like walking over
    sandpaper and wears the rug out." She also suggests going easy on
    over-the-counter spotting agents: "They leave residue in the rugs."

    Finally she says, don't think that because a rug has been sitting in
    the formal living room and walked on only twice in 20 years that it
    doesn't need cleaning. "Moisture needs to be introduced," she says,
    "and it's to places where it's quiet that moths tend to gravitate."

    Barbara Rodriguez
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