Showing 1–12 of 67 results
Runners, Senneh
Vintage Senneh hand made from natural wool and organic dyes
2’5 x 10’2
Senneh
Vintage Senneh hand made from natural wool and organic dyes.
The finely woven Senneh kilims are slit tapestries of the highest quality. Their small-scale borders are carried around the ends, as they are typically in pile carpets but rarely in such weavings.
2’5 x 10’2
Kazak Rugs
Kazak Prayer Fachralou hand made from natural wool and organic dyes. featuring unique design.
3’9 x 5’1
Caucasian Rugs
Antique Caucasian Rug featuring unique design. Hand made from natural wool and organic dyes. This Antique Caucasian Rug would make an excellent addition to contemporary design as well, making this an essential versatile design piece for any space.
3’7 x 8
Antique Rugs
Navajos
Antique Rugs, Kuba Zeichur
Antique Kuba rugs include famous chi-chi prayer rugs, large-scale blossom patterns and richly colored rugs decorated with a series of radiant medallions. Lezghi stars and Chelaberd medallions with appendages that resemble eagle’s wings or sunbursts are also produced.
3’8 x 6’8
Antique Rugs, Beluch Rugs
Baluch Rugs– Within the antique Oriental rugs milieu familiar to collectors and rug enthusiasts, no single group of rugs has had a more checkered or contested career than Baluch rugs and carpets, woven by tribes people in eastern Persia and western Afghanistan.
3 x 4’4
Antique Rugs, Kurdish
Kurdish rugs are as diverse as the ethnic weavers who created them. The presence of Kurdish weavers in the northwestern area of Persia and the Iranian Kurdistan region has led to some stylistic overlap. Antique Kurdish rugs are one of the few under-recognized rug types to emerge in the past 30 years. Kurdish
4 x 12’8
Kazak Rugs
Kazak rugs stand out as some of the most highly-prized artistic artifacts of the Central Asian cultures and can add a touch of class and culture to a well-designed room.
3’6 x 5’2
Navajos
Navajo rugs and native American Indian blankets are intricately geometric, tightly woven rugs in which the weft is packed tightly, making the warp invisible. It is commonly believed that the Pueblo Indians first introduced weaving to the Navajo Indian at the beginning of the 18th century.
3’8 x 5