Múzeumi műtárgyvédelem 3., 1976 (Múzeumi Restaurátor És Módszertani Központ)

A képek jegyzéke

269 Table XXXI. Fig. 71: Christ statue from back view, after restoring. Fig. 72: Christ statue from side view, after restoring. Fig. 73: Christ statue from front view, after restoring. Table XXXII. Fig. 74-75. Hair from the knots of a carpet. Magnified 300 times. Thread thickness 60 micron. Fig. 76: Hair from the weft. Thread thickness 60 micron. Fig. 77: Shabby wool from the weft. One division of a micrometer is equal with 10 micron. Table XXXIII. Fig. 78: Caucasian carpet from the XIX. century. Before restoring. From the crosswisely split object the smaller part is visible. Fig. 79: The supplying of the warp and cross fibres was carried out on a tentering frame. Table XXXIV. Fig. 80: Detail of the carpet’s reverse. It is well perceptible that after each knot row two loosely carried hold-down threads were applied. That resulted an even level of the knots and the smoothness of the reverse. This is one of the technical characteristcs of the Sirvan carpet region. Fig. 81: Contour of the motif from the reverse side. Fig. 82: Way of strenghtening the original side border, the so called eightfold stitch. Fig. 83: Strenghtening of the side border with simple eightfold stitch, accor­ding to the original technique. Table XXXV. Fig. 84: In consequence of the former mending on the carpet’s border the fastening of the original warpthread was unprovable. Fig. 85: The former mendings had to be removed. Fig. 86: In the completed backing fabric the contour of the knotted motif is to be seen from the upper side, according to the drawing. Fig. 87: The new wa'rps had to be arranged at the border of the frame in four rows with subsidiary cross fibres, thus achieving equal distances.

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