Hooked Rug
| Type: | For the Floor |
|---|---|
| Object Name: | Hooked Rug |
| Place Made: | North America: Canada, Central Canada, Ontario, Western Ontario |
| Period: | Early 20th century |
| Date: | c 1930 |
| Dimensions: | L 90 cm x W 62 cm |
| Materials: | Burlap; wool; polyester fibre or material |
| Techniques: | Hooked; hand-sewn; machine-sewn |
| ID Number: | T94.0354 |
| Credit: | From the Opekar / Webster Collection |
Rug hooking is a unique North American tradition that arose in response to the need to cover the cold bare floors of pioneer homes. Weaving cloth required long hours at the spinning wheel and loom, but rugs could be made from scraps of fabrics and fibres that were pulled through a burlap base to produce warm floor-coverings to brighten the home. It is rare to find a hooked rug whose maker is known; unlike quilts, which were treasured family possessions, hooked rugs wore out and their history was often lost.
