Showing 13–24 of 406 results
Antique Rugs, Collectible Rugs, Kourosh Collection
This piece of genuine woven carpet art is a Classical Silk Collectible Caucasian Kayseri in Great Condition. Turkish Kayseri Rugs can be identified by their dense weaving.
3’9″ x 6’7″
Antique Rugs, Bidjar Rugs, Bijar, Collectible Rugs, Pakistan Rugs, Persian Rugs, Tribal
Antique Rugs, Collectible Rugs, Kourosh Collection, Tribal, Turkish Rugs
Unique Antique Turkish Silk Prayer Rug with Two Metal Thread Scripts Genuine Authentic Woven Carpet Art
4’7″ x 6’3″
Antique Rugs, Collectible Rugs, Kourosh Collection, Silk Rugs
Fine Antique Silk Persian Kashan Tree of Life Rug Genuine Woven Carpet Art Intricate
4’2″ x 6’7″
Collectible Rugs, Kourosh Collection, Silk Rugs
Finest Silk Persian Tabriz One of the Finest in the World
4 x 6
Antique Rugs, Collectible Rugs, Kourosh Collection
Antique Sultan’s Head Silk Meditation Rug: Garden Of Paradise
3’4″ x 5’6″
Antique Rugs, Collectible Rugs, Hereke, Kourosh Collection, Silk Rugs, Turkish Rugs
Antique Rugs, Classical Rugs, Collectible Rugs, Iranian Rugs, Kourosh Collection, Persian Rugs, Silk Rugs, Tabriz Rugs
Handmade in Persia
From the 1800s
Designer Collections, Mughal Rugs, Silk Rugs, The Contempo Collection, Ziegler & Company
4’1 x 6’3′
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
4’2 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.
Antique Rugs, Designer Collections, Silk Rugs, Ziegler & Company
4 x 6’1
Finest tree of light hand made rug of natural wool and silk
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