This ethnographic film concerns the lives of women who work in the world's largest carpet weaving workshop, located in Neyshaboor, Iran. The goal was to holistically represent their lives and art, as interrelated realities, but the folk artists were quite reluctant to take part in the film always maintaining distance from the camera and film crew. While we were nearly disappointed, a disabled but extremely lively woman, Ms. Robabe, invited us to her house and allowed us to see some other facets of her life. During the two months of research and filming, we witnessed more than a hundred humble women who, although seemingly reserved and impassive, with a great deal of dedication tackled numerous difficulties in order to provide a hand-to-mouth existence for their families. The idea of being considered as a folk artist was a laughable dream for most of these women. The aesthetic of the film is trying to reflect the sub-narrations of their fragmented lives and communicate the emotional atmosphere dominating theses anonymous carpet weavers.