A Phone Call From Baghdad and a Silk Persian Qum Rug
CategoriesRug Ideas
		
		 
	            It was Saturday today here in Los Angeles. I received  a phone call early morning  from Baghdad, Iraq  from  a US  army personnel  who was  going to come home in a few days.  He  would like to buy a silk  Qum  Persian rug  from Baghdad and he wanted to get some information about this kind of rug and its price. The design as he mentioned is the dome  design, which is     inspired by the inside ceilings of mosques, which typically feature     colorful and star shaped ceilings. Dome is the synonymous for Gonbad in Farsi. This  design is made after the interior design of the Sheikh Lotfofflah Mosque in Isfahan. Sheikh Lotfollah Mosque was an architectural masterpieces of Safavid era built in 1615 by the order of Shah Abbas I of the Safavid dynasty in Isfahan, Iran. The mosque was dedicated to Sheikh Lotfollah, a preacher who was the Shah Abbas’ father-in-law.
design is made after the interior design of the Sheikh Lotfofflah Mosque in Isfahan. Sheikh Lotfollah Mosque was an architectural masterpieces of Safavid era built in 1615 by the order of Shah Abbas I of the Safavid dynasty in Isfahan, Iran. The mosque was dedicated to Sheikh Lotfollah, a preacher who was the Shah Abbas’ father-in-law.
I asked this army personnel to e-mail me few pictures from the rug, back and face and from the signature of the weaver and told him first, he should be concerned with the good condition of the rug and whether the rug is a genuine Persian rug or a fake one. Then we should be concerned about the price. He said he could e-mail me the photos in one day and I said I would get back to him immediately after I receive the pictures.
This gentleman had googled information about silk Persian rug and had found my rug blog and then my web site. Isn’t this interesting and fun. This gives me more incentive to write on rugs in my blog!
Khosrow Sobhe
www.RugIdea.com
310-770-9085


Yes. I too found your blog before finding your website. I’m from Siingapore, which is half a world away.