Things You'll Need
Instructions
Examine the textile to determine whether it is a genuine antique tapestry. Antique pieces are made exclusively from natural yarns of natural plant or animal fibers, such as cotton, silk, or wool. Many antique tapestries also contain threads of metallic gold or silver.
Check the colors. Dyes on antique tapestries come from natural plant substances, such as indigo for blue and madder for red. Yarn dyed with natural vegetable colors will not fade in sunlight or undergo chemical changes. The colors in an antique tapestry should therefore be as vivid as when the tapestry was new.
Look closely at the pattern of the threads. Tapestries woven on a loom use a pattern of warp and weft threads. "Warp" is the name designating the threads stretched across the loom before the weaving begins, and "weft" refers to the threads woven into the warp. Tapestries are unusual in that all of the warp threads are completely invisible in the finished piece. Thus, an antique tapestry will appear to consist exclusively of weft threads that run across the textile.
Make sure the design is woven into the textile. Antique tapestries never have printed designs, and they won't have any embroidered designs sewn onto an existing piece of cloth. Some embroidered pieces may look like authentic tapestries at first glance, so give any textile you encounter a thorough inspection. The maker of an antique tapestry would have dyed the yarn and woven threads into the tapestry itself to form the design.
Sell your antique tapestry to a reputable antique dealer or a tapestry or textile specialist. Experienced dealers can determine the age and make of an antique piece, as there are many distinguishing characteristics that mark a tapestry as belonging to a certain period. For example, tapestries tend to reflect the artistic tastes of a particular era, from floral ornamentations in medieval scenes to elegant Baroque presentations that resemble the paintings of the old masters.