Showing 73–84 of 101 results
Persian Rugs, Ziegler & Company
Vintage Persian Rug is fine for its pattern. Handspun in India and made of natural wool/ organic dyes. Perfect for any contemporary living space.
Size:9’5 x 12’1
Persian Rugs, Ziegler & Company
Vintage Persian Rug is fine for its pattern. Handspun in India and made of natural wool/ organic dyes. Perfect for any contemporary living space.
Size:9’6 x 11’10
Persian Rugs, Ziegler & Company
Vintage Persian Rug is fine for its pattern. Handspun in India and made of natural wool/ organic dyes. Perfect for any contemporary living space.
Size:9’3 x 11’3
Persian Rugs, Ziegler & Company
Vintage Persian Rug is fine for its pattern. Handspun in India and made of natural wool/ organic dyes. Perfect for any contemporary living space.
Size:9’1 x 11’8
Modern Rugs
Modern Beige Rug is fine for its pattern. Handspun in India and made of natural wool/ organic dyes. Perfect for any contemporary living space.
Size: 10×14
Modern Rugs
Modern M. Blue Rug is fine for its pattern. Handspun in India and made of natural wool/ organic dyes. Perfect for any contemporary living space.
Size: 8×10
Collectible Rugs, Kourosh Collection, Suzani, Textile Art
Pashmina shawls are of the highest quality made from the pashmina goat from Kashmir, India. Its fleece has been used for thousands of years to make the highest quality of shawls called pashminas.
6’1″ x 6’1″
Antique Rugs, Collectible Rugs, Kourosh Collection, Persian Rugs, Silk Rugs, Textile Art, Tribal
Pashmina shawls are of the highest quality made from the pashmina goat from Kashmir, India. Its fleece has been used for thousands of years to make the highest quality of shawls called pashminas. Cashmere or Kashmir shawls were of a very soft fabric made from the wool of the Cashmere goat. The Kashmir shawl, is undoubtedly the crown jewel of Kashmir’s artistic heritage. It represents the culmination of the ingenuity and talent of a variety of craftsmen, all coming together to create an unparalleled piece of woven fabric and embroidered art. There is no better testament to the prestige associated with the Kashmir shawl than the fact that it was a prized adornment of the Kings and Emperors of India. This Antique Finest 1700s Persian Pashmina Kashmiri Shawl is a beautiful piece in stellar condition for its age.
6’2″ x 6’2″
Antique Rugs, Collectible Rugs, Iranian Rugs, Kerman Rugs, Persian Rugs
Circa 1850
4’3″ x 7’2″
Allover floral design; Millefleur
All natural dyes
Beautiful cochineal red, pink, navy blue, gold, beige, and ivory
This Antique Persian Kerman Ravar Rug- Millefleurs is a masterpiece among Persian rugs with feature of a floral allover pattern called Millefleurs (thousand flower). On the top part of this piece of art has a Moon and Khorshid Khanum (Lady Sun).
“The Millefleur “star-lattice” carpet dating to late 17th or early 18th century Mughal India has been sold for 4,786,500 pounds (USD 7,687,119) in the Oriental Rugs and Carpets sale at Christie’s London more than doubling its pre-sale estimate of 1.5 – 2 million pounds,” auctioneers said in a statement.
Designer Collections, Mughal Rugs, Silk Rugs, Ziegler & Company
4’2 x 6’7′
Carpet weaving was one of the most outstanding aspects of textile production in India under the Mughal dynasty from the late sixteenth to early eighteenth centuries. Antique Mughal carpets were court art and as such they have a regal, palatial aura redolent of a bygone era of luxury and imperial grandeur.
Designer Collections, Mughal Rugs, Silk Rugs, Ziegler & Company
4 x 6
Carpet weaving was one of the most outstanding aspects of textile production in India under the Mughal dynasty from the late sixteenth to early eighteenth centuries. Many of these carpets, the so-called Indo-Isfahan types shared in the common repertory of later Islamic design that was used in contemporary Safavid Persian rug production
Designer Collections, Mughal Rugs, Mughal Rugs, Silk Rugs, Ziegler & Company
4’1 x 6’1
Carpet weaving was one of the most outstanding aspects of textile production in India under the Mughal dynasty from the late sixteenth to early eighteenth centuries. Many of these carpets, the so-called Indo-Isfahan types shared in the common repertory of later Islamic design that was used in contemporary Safavid Persian rug production.