Ultraviolet (UV) light is a basic tool of the fine arts and the forensic sciences, used primarily to expose repairs and forgeries. When a rug is repaired, or purposely altered such as by changing an inscribed date, the affected areas may show up strongly when viewed in UV light unless the worker has employed heroic efforts to disguise his or her endeavors. In Turkey, it is said, some repair shops use wool unraveled from old kilims in their restorations. To the extent that the old dyes match those in the rug under repair, UV detection may be difficult or impossible.
To understand the effects of UV light, a little technical background is in order. When we look at dyed wool, the impression of color results from the way the wool absorbs and reflects light. To make a color match, the repairer picks and (when necessary) mixes colors "in the needle" until the new wool gives the same impression of color as the old. One wool may have a little more green, the other a bit more blue and yellow, but overall the effect is almost identical. The method works because we can see the results.
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If UV lies beyond the visible range, how can we use it for inspection at all? First, we can cheat. A so-called "ultraviolet lamp" usually emits quite a lot of near-UV light which, in the absence of the normal yellow and red rays, is capable of showing some contrast between new and old wools. Second, the real UV produced by the lamp may cause some dyes to fluoresce (absorb UV and reemit it as spurious colors), and wool dyed with these materials will stand out. Third, we can resort to photography -- either black and white, which is hard to interpret, or color, which is much more satisfactory. Photographic film, unlike our eyes, can "see" UV very well. In the developed film, the UV-rich areas show up in false colors. They aren't real colors -- remember, we can't see ultraviolet -- but all we need to determine fraud or repair are contrasting colors, and that's what the process gives us.
Illustration 1a shows a portion of a worn Northwest Persian runner before restoration. It was important to know how much work had been done previously. Earlier repairers had been skillful; it wasn't always obvious what was new and what was old knotting. Illustration 1b shows what the UV camera revealed. Looking to the right and left of the vertical center line of the rug, one can see major discrepancies. Large blocks of rug had been carefully re-piled.
This UV image gives a good idea of what meets the eye when a rug is bathed in the light of a commercial UV lamp in a darkened room. As mentioned above, the lamp puts out a lot of blue and violet visible light; otherwise we would see nothing except the fluoresced rays, if any. Thus Illustration 1b technically is not a UV photograph -- it is partially in UV and partially in visible light. Quite obviously this is good enough to make the alterations apparent.
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It isn't always predictable how a rug will show up in UV light, so to do a thorough UV analysis of a rug it's wise to use both the methods described. In cases where fluorescence is a possibility, the method of Illustration 1b definitely should be employed, as the filter used for the method of Illustration 4 will block from the film any fluoresced light which is in the visible band.
It's necessary to state the following precaution: Never look at the sun through a UV filter. The image of the sun may appear very dim, but a big dose of searing UV will be hitting your retina. Permanent, serious, and immediate damage can result. Also, it is highly inadvisable to look directly at a UV lamp or the illumination it casts for more than a few seconds.
Surprisingly, the equipment needed for UV color photography can be relatively inexpensive although it takes considerable experimentation and technical experience to get good results. The typical indoor setup shown in Illustration 3 features a commercial mercury-vapor UV lamp which sells for a few hundred dollars. In a darkened room, this is ideal for visual inspection and for photographs of small portions of a rug. For large fields, more power is required, and multiple UV tubes can be mounted in standard fluorescent fixtures for this purpose. Alternatively, the method of Illustration 2b can be employed if the sun can be persuaded to cooperate.
Also shown in illustration 3 are two ancient Polaroid cameras, which in my opinion work better than the modern motor-driven Polaroids. These cameras are still available, reconditioned, for under a hundred dollars, and the copy stands are also obtainable. This setup was used for Illustration 2, the photo requiring an exposure time of about half a minute.
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For those readers who wish to try their hands at UV inspection, either visual or photographic, these notes may provide some guidance.
For those who don't want to bother with procuring the equipment and gaining the expertise, UV inspection is one of the services offered by the author's engineering company in Newton, Massachusetts. One may contact Philip Lichtman at 3 Valley Spring Road, Newton, MA 02158.
