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HOW TO STOP RUGS FROM SHEDDING

HOW TO STOP RUGS FROM SHEDDING

1st May 2023

HOW TO STOP RUGS FROM SHEDDING?

A MILLION DOLLAR QUESTION!

Countless hours searching for a dream rug to suit your home and lifestyle. And then success — Perfection comes at just the right price. But when you get it home, there’s a problem. The popular question is how to stop rugs from shedding, which becomes very important for you. The rug sheds… sheds… and sheds. Vacuuming and brushing just keep getting worse.


WHAT CAUSES A RUG TO SHED?

Sometimes, shedding happens briefly with a new rug and will stop within a couple of months, after light vacuuming and normal wear. If your rug is still shedding, then there are two main contributing factors: The material and the make.

MATERIAL

Even among wool it is not all the same quality. Sheep that are reared high in the mountains have long hair, naturally rich with lanolin wool to keep them warm and comfortable in high altitudes. wool from these high-altitude sheep is used to weave rugs of a very high, durable quality. wool from the sheep in lower lands tends to be coarser than their highland cousins and is of a lesser quality. If these sheep are sheered too often and the wool is left short, in order to make the yarn usable, adhesives will be added to bring these short wool pieces together. The adhesive breaks down over time, and these little pieces begin to shed.

MAKE

There are a number of different ways to stop rugs from shedding, and the difference in quality comes down to whether a rug is:

  • Made by hand, like hand-knotted and hand-woven
  • Manufactured with modern techniques, like machine-made and hand-tufted

Hand-made rugs are crafted from techniques that give structural integrity to pieces: hand-knotted rugs are made from hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of threads knotted to the rug’s cotton or wool foundation. Hand-woven rugs are made by repeatedly passing a warp through the carpet’s weft. These techniques insure that every part of the rug is integral to the rug’s structure, and therefore, less likely to come apart.

More modern techniques are more about assembling pieces than weaving strong,durable rugs. For example, in hand-tufting, a tufting gun is used to shoot fabric “tufts” through a plastic grid. These rugs need to be backed with a polymer or glue to keep the tufts in place. Not only is the wool of lesser quality, the backing material can deteriorate and both the backing and pile will begin to shed. 

Machine-made rugs are made at incredible speed on a machine similar to a newspaper ream, and usually from polymer-based materials to survive this process. These synthetic materials breakdown as would other petroleum-based materials.

When you combine lower quality material and purchase from people who don’t know where the rug is sourced from, there are a lot more chances for your rug to shed.

1. Lightly vacuum it regularly, going with the grain of the pile and not against it

2. Make sure not to use a heavy beater bar or have the vacuum on the setting closest to the ground

3. Use a high-quality rug pad under the rug to absorb shock and reduce further damage to the pile

4.If possible, move it to a low-traffic area

Remember, artificial materials may have less shedding compared to natural ones.