Description
A finely detailed Persian-style rug with delicate floral motifs and a rich, warm palette. Elegant, timeless, and perfect for adding softness and heritage to any space.
A finely detailed Persian-style rug with delicate floral motifs and a rich, warm palette. Elegant, timeless, and perfect for adding softness and heritage to any space.
| Size | 300×200 |
|---|
Festival Diamonds Kilim is an electrifying handwoven piece that feels like pure celebration underfoot. Set on a deep midnight blue ground, its bold diamond lattice glows with vibrant bursts of red, yellow, green, turquoise, and ivory — like a mosaic of tribal symbols dancing across the surface. Each diamond panel is filled with intricate motifs, […]
This rug draws inspiration from the legendary weaving traditions of the Caucasus Mountains, a region spanning modern-day Azerbaijan, Armenia, Georgia, and Dagestan. Rugs from this area — often known as Kazak rugs — were traditionally woven by tribal communities in remote highland villages. These were not commercial products, but deeply personal creations: woven for family […]
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 […]
Desert Constellation Gabbeh is a masterclass in understated tribal beauty — a rug defined by space, warmth, and quiet confidence. Its rich terracotta field is intentionally open and grounded, allowing the four circular medallions to float like symbolic stars in a desert sky. Framed by crisp geometric borders in sapphire, ivory, and ember tones, this […]
A striking handwoven tribal runner featuring intricate geometric motifs and rich crimson, indigo, and ivory tones. Perfect for hallways and narrow spaces, bringing warmth, history, and character underfoot.
Backstory Red Atlas is rooted in Afghan and Turkmen weaving traditions, where deep reds and repeating geometric motifs were used to express strength, continuity, and belonging. The dense field pattern — built from small, rhythmic forms — reflects the nomadic logic of rugs designed to last generations. The rich madder-red ground is balanced by dark […]
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