Mikey P
Administrator
oh for sure, like book ends....

Whats all the debris on the tarp? Did you use that sawdust cleaner stuff?most I dont care for, think this was the last 1 I liked.
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no that was the soil in itWhats all the debris on the tarp? Did you use that sawdust cleaner stuff?
Up who's a, ah never mind.Hey. I didn’t even want to talk about it. Lets just meet in the desert and install a flagpole.
I think she meant you, not the rug.I gave all but one of mine away. Mrs. Coastie says the last one stinks. It does not. But it is rolled up in the downstairs apartment, waiting for someone to want it.
Never argue with wimminz about smells.
I think that rug would look better if you removed the fringe Bob. It's really easy on that type of rug and it would look a whole lot better than that worn fringe.
That explains the clothespin.I think she meant you, not the rug.
That rug normally wouldn't be worth doing a lot of work on, but it's the kind of unusual color/pattern "ethnic" look that would make it an easy sell today.most I dont care for, think this was the last 1 I liked.
Removing or turning fringe under has become the most popular end repair for us, as fringe is out of style for most rugs. On the other hand, the "vintage" look is so hot that the second most popular repair is maintaining the exact look of current wear while keeping the rug from getting worse.I think that rug would look better if you removed the fringe Bob. It's really easy on that type of rug and it would look a whole lot better than that worn fringe.
We have a division of our company that sells ragged out classic rugs. https://detroitrugrestoration.com/Removing or turning fringe under has become the most popular end repair for us, as fringe is out of style for most rugs. On the other hand, the "vintage" look is so hot that the second most popular repair is maintaining the exact look of current wear while keeping the rug from getting worse.
The raggedy end look was a tough concept for our repair people to grasp at first.