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Cleaning Services

Persian Carpet Cleaning | Rug Cleaning Services

Persian Carpet Cleaning
Persian Carpet Cleaning Service

​A Persian rug holds centuries of skill, knot by knot, thread by thread. Dust, soil, and daily use dim its glow. Wool and silk break down fast without proper care. Good Persian Carpet Cleaning is not a quick house task. It saves a piece of art and old world craft. If you use the wrong soap or too much water, dyes can bleed. Moths may chew the wool, and the base can rot.
 

Why a Pro Persian Carpet Cleaning Is Worth More Than DIY Fixes

Some folks try to clean their old rugs with a rented steam tool and cheap soap from a store shelf. This plan can cause big harm. Real hand-knotted Persian rugs use wool, silk, and plant dyes that hate harsh, high-pH soap. Strong soap strips wool of its own natural shield. Hot steam can push red and blue dyes out of their threads and into the white fringe. A skilled Persian Carpet Cleaning Service will use a wash with the right pH, just a bit of dampness, and a soft touch by hand.

The Deep Dirt You Do Not See

Your rug may look clean on top, but real harm hides where your eyes can't reach. Deep grit, moth eggs, and mold spores sit at the base of the knots, slowly eating away at wool and silk threads day after day.
 

Grit That Rubs Like Sand
 

Each time you step on a dusty rug, you push sharp bits of dirt down. These bits cut the wool, like fine sand on glass. The wool wears thin and the shine fades.
 

Moths That Chew in the Dark
 

Moths love the dark spots under your couch or bed where wool sits still for months. Their young ones eat the wool pile, and you may see small bare spots with thin webs left behind.
 

Fume Stains from Fake Dyes
 

Some old fixes used man-made dyes that react with light and air. These spots can turn dark and break down, and the bad air they give off can harm the good wool threads right next to them.
 

Rings from a Spill
 

If you blot a spill with just a wet rag, the damp sinks deep into the base of the rug. As it dries, the deep dirt rides up to the tip of the wool, and a dark ring forms that won't come out with more spot dabs.
 

Mold in the Damp
 

Wool can hold a lot of water in the air and still feel dry to your touch. In wet rooms or by the sea, mold spores feed on the wool threads, and they snap like old twigs when you bend them.

Curious how Rug Cleaning Services is done at Sam's Oriental Rugs? Alot of soap, water, drying and labor! Watch our own video below!

Where a Rug Was Made Shapes How to Wash It

 

The town or tribe that made your rug gives clues to its care. A fine silk Tabriz with soft cream tones needs a much more gentle wash than a thick wool Heriz with strong shapes. Makers in old towns used salts to set their dyes, so hot water can cause streaks. A good Persian Carpet Cleaning Service checks these facts before the wash starts.
 

The Dry Shake Before the Wet Wash

 

First, a rug must lose all its dry dust. A big hand-woven piece can hide pounds of fine grit, pet hair, and dead skin deep in the knots. Smart Rug Cleaning Services use a soft shake tool that hums on the back while a light suck takes the dust away. If you skip this step, the dust turns to mud in the wash.
 

The Right Mix of Water, Soap, and Dry Time

 

Wool and silk are best washed at a pH near 5.5. A pro who knows Persian Carpet Cleaning makes the bath just so. If the mix is off, wool scales puff up and lock tight, and the rug turns stiff as a board. Then the rug lies flat in a room with dry air and soft fans. Skilled Rug Cleaning Services keep an eye on the air and the rug's dampness throughout this time.

Let Sam's Antique Oriental Rug Bring Back Your Rug's Best Look

Your Persian rug holds old tales in each knot and row. At Sam's Antique Oriental Rug, we know these rugs from the core out. We use a mild pH wash, slow dry rooms, and hand care at each step. Our shop checks each rug to spot weak dyes or thin spots first. We lift out years of deep dirt and bring back the silk-smooth touch.

Frequently Asked Questions

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