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Should you need to store your kilim area ruf
for a long period here are some ‘do’s’ and
‘don’ts’ you’ll find useful. Do wash
and dry it very thoroughly (or have it cleaned and properly
dried) before storage. Do have the rug mothproofed or use moth
flakes, not in direct contact with the rug but within folds
of paper or cloth placed in the kilim rug as it is rolled up.
Do roll the rug to be stored rather than folding it. Don’t
store your rugs in a moist, hot environment or in a place without
adequate ventilation as these are the ideal breeding grounds
for destructive mildew to form. Don’t store your area
rugs in any place that is accessible to mice, rats, or other
fabric-eating creatures.
If you have researched the subject of kilim care – as
we have tried to do – you may have noticed a lack of consensus
regarding an item related to storage: should the rug be packed
airtight or not. Certain kilim authorities (Alastair Hull and
Jose Luczyc-Wyhowska in “Kilim, The Complete Guide”;
Lee Allane in “Kilims, A Buyer’s Guide”) recommend,
or appear to recommend, airtight packaging, while others, including
the eSouthwest website, advise the opposite saying that rugs
need to breathe and that plastic wrapping may cause mildew.
We are inclined to agree with the latter, mainly because we
know that it is a time-tested method to roll rugs up together
with a bed sheet or other large cloth first placed on the face
of the rug, with the excess of that material, or an additional
piece of fabric, forming the outer wrapping. Experienced practical
housewives we have surveyed confirm this as being the method
that they use.
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