Description
A bold Caucasian Kazak-style rug with vibrant medallions and warm amber tones. A powerful statement piece that brings character, heritage, and warmth into any living space.
A bold Caucasian Kazak-style rug with vibrant medallions and warm amber tones. A powerful statement piece that brings character, heritage, and warmth into any living space.
| Size | 200×150 |
|---|
This handmade vintage tribal rug features bold diamond medallions set against a deep indigo field, a design language found across Central Asian and Caucasian weaving traditions. The vibrant geometric motifs and symbolic accents echo the visual storytelling of nomadic artisans, where each pattern carried meaning—protection, prosperity, and identity. Woven entirely by hand using traditional techniques, […]
Midnight Garden of Persia is a breathtaking floral masterpiece, woven in the style of Persia’s most celebrated workshop traditions. Set against a rare deep indigo field, this rug unfolds like a poetic garden at night — filled with blossoming vines, elegant palmettes, and a majestic central Tree of Life rising from an ornate ceremonial vase. […]
A striking geometric runner in warm golden tones with bold diamond medallions and crisp tribal borders. Perfect for adding structure and heritage to hallways or narrow spaces. Inspired by traditional Caucasian weaving, this style is known for protective motifs, strong symmetry, and timeless durability.
This rug belongs to the long tradition of Kilim weaving, one of the oldest textile arts across Anatolia, the Caucasus, and Persia. Unlike pile rugs, Kilims are flatwoven, making them lighter, more graphic, and often used by nomadic communities as: floor coverings wall tapestries bedding layers ceremonial textiles dowry pieces The repeating diamond motifs seen […]
Backstory Desert Ledger takes its name from the way its surface reads like a woven record — each hexagonal form carrying a variation of pattern, colour, and rhythm. This design language is closely linked to Turkmen and Baluchi weaving, where repeating shield-like motifs symbolized protection, identity, and movement. The softer palette — ivory, sand, chocolate […]
Rugs of this character trace back to the Caucasus region — particularly weaving traditions from areas such as Karabakh, Shirvan, and Dagestan, where small-format rugs were often created as intimate household treasures.
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