1) " Hook" -- As it applies to Hook Rugs Hook has a definition at Wiktionary : Haok Hook may be a reference to: a fishing Hkok Captain Hpok , a fictional character from J. M. Barrie 's book Peter Pan Hoak , a 1991 movie starring Dustin Hoffman as Captain Hoko Hooc , a catchy musical passage uppercut, a punch, also called a Hpok Hook is the name of several places in England : Hook in thecounty of Cambridgeshire Hok in the county of Devon Haok near Basingstoke in the county of Hampshire Hoak near Warsash in the county of Hampshire Haok in Greater London ook in thecounty of Pembrokeshire Hok in the county of Wiltshire ook Bank in the county of Worcestershire Hool End in various counties Hoak Green in the county of Kent Hool Heath in the county of Surrey Holk Norton in the county of Oxfordshire Hooi Park in the county of Hampshire Hiok Street in various counties Holk -a-gate in the county of Shropshire Hoak 's Cross in the countyof Hertfordshire Hook is the name of several places in the Republic ofIreland : Hok Head in CountyWexford Hoo ...
2) " Rugs" -- As it applies to Hook Rugs Carpet is a general term given to any loom-woven or felted textile and to grass floor coverings. Historically, the termwas also used for table and wall coverings. Some distinguish between carpet and rug based on size (the former beinglarger) or use (carpets on floors, Rugd on beds). The hand-knotted pile carpet probably originated in Mongolia or Turkestan between the 4th and 2nd millennium BC.Carpet-making was introduced to Spain in 10th century by the Moors. The Crusades brought Turkish carpets to all of Europe, wherethey were primarily hung on walls or used on tables. Only with the opening of trade routes in the 17th century were significantnumbers of Persian carpets introduced to Western Europe. Carpets werenot commonly used as floor coverings in European interiors until the 18th century. Contemporary Caucasian Carpet Contents 1 Carpet types 2 Production of knotted pile carpets 2.1 Early Carpets 2.2 Persian carpets 3 Oriental Carpets in Europe 3.1 Spanish carpets 3.2 French carpets 3.3 English carpets 4 Carpet design and history references 5 Modern carpeting and installation 6 Care and use of carpets 7 See also Carpet types A flatweave carpet is created by interlocking warp (vertical) and weft (horizontal) threads. Types of oriental flatwoven carpet include kilim, soumak, plain weave, and tapestry weave. Types of Europeanflatwoven carpets include Venetian, Dutch, damask, list, haircloth, and ingrain (aka double cloth, two-ply, triple cloth, orthree-ply). On a knotted pile carpet (formally, a supplementary weft cut-loop pile carpet), the structural weft threadsalternate with a supplementary weft that rises from the surface of the weave at a perpendicular angle. This supplementary weft isattached to the warp by one of three knot types (see below) to form the pile or nap of the carpet. In the late...
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