拍品专文
Just as with official court attire, the Imperial Household Agency oversaw the procurement of palace furnishings and governed their proper placement and use throughout public chambers and imperial residences. A cut-velvet carpet of similar size and decoration, dated to the late 18th century, is published in Imperial Silks: Ch’ing Dynasty Textiles in the Minneapolis Museum of Arts, vol. II, 2000, pp. 1094-5, no. 543, acc. no. 50.22, where the author notes that luxurious silk-velvet carpets were made in very limited quantities in South China, in cities such as Nanjing and Hangzhou.