I dont always know when a rug has pee in it. So...
I was caught totally off guard with this rug. A few weeks ago a customer came in and dropped off a couple of small rugs. Pretty standard. Nothing to report. Didn't make any videos on them. When I called to tell her they were ready, she said she had another rug and she was going to bring it in when she came to pick up the other rugs. Not a problem. Very common. People do that all the time. Sometimes people will use what I call a scout rug. Which means they'll bring a rug to me that's not expensive. Maybe it's still high quality. Maybe it's small. But it's just a rug to bring it in and see what kind of work we produce. It doesn't happen all the time, but it's not totally uncommon for people to do that. I mean, a lot of this stuff is very high quality. It's all handmade. And it makes sense that someone would want to kind of check out how your work is before they commit to a more expensive, larger piece. I don't think I was ready for this. This is a high quality handmade rug. It's Persian, which is made in Iran. And when it was dropped off, it had no odor. No visible signs of any kind of pet stain or anything like that. As soon as we got it wet and we started working on it, we could tell that it was different. It was different because it immediately started to smell like pet stains, like pet urine. Which is why the video kind of starts out in the middle of the process rather than where I would normally start. Nonetheless, it makes for great viewing and it turned out really awesome. Which I'm going to show you a little video of it after we cleaned it. But I'm just going to give you a quick little clip of what's coming out of the rug after we put it in the centrifuge. And we just kind of run that until it runs clear. And then we take it out and here's what the final product is.
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