![Suzani Rug Santa Barbara Design Center](https://rugsandmore.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Screen-shot-2014-02-04-at-11.21.45-AM.png)
[caption id="attachment_9751" align="alignnone" width="423"]
![suzani-32jpg](https://rugsandmore.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/suzani-32jpg-857x1024.jpg)
![suzani 17](https://rugsandmore.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/suzani-171-675x1024.jpg)
Suzani Rug Design
Popular design motifs include sun and moon disks, flowers (especially tulips, carnations, and irises), leaves and vines, fruits, and occasional fish and birds.Graceful floral motifs dominate in Uzbek suzanis rugs--both in nineteenth century pieces and in modern work. In a bleak desert landscape, oasis and courtyard gardens are especially cherished, and so plants, blossoms and vines of all types appear in the needlework, as well as occasional fish and birds. Old traditional abstracted forms also appear: palmettes, rosettes, and pomegranates. Medallions are nearly always flower forms, although there is speculation that some large roundels may have represented the sun or moon in past times. Ottoman brocades and embroidery designs have always been highly regarded in Central Asia, and so dramatic Ottoman tulip designs have been appearing as well in the contemporary embroideries. [caption id="attachment_9773" align="alignnone" width="425"]![Suzani needle workers rugs and more](https://rugsandmore.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Suzani_needleworkers.jpg)
Suzanis were traditionally made by Central Asian brides as part of their dowry, and were presented to the groom on the wedding day. These hand-embroidered vintage suzanis are infused with the character that only comes from everyday use. Perhaps created by a bride-to-be to show her devotion to her betrothed and then in lean times bartered away to a traveling Gypsy for money or household necessities pulled from the depths of his donkey cart. The story of each of these suzani rugs is as rich as their colors, as intricate as the designs that cover their surfaces