Showing 25–36 of 157 results
Antique Jat Kurd Bagface hand made from natural wool and organic dyes. These rugs are tribal by nature and are made to be mobile, since the tribes moved often.
2 x 2’4
Antique Rugs, Farahan Rugs
Antique Farahan Rugs and carpets that were woven in/around the region called Arak in west central Iran, are remarkable for their ability to combine different qualities and sensibilities. The medallion design customary on so-called Farahan is classically Persian, as is all the minor detail. This Antique Farahan Rug is hand woven wool with natural dyes.
2 x 2’7
Antique Rugs, Turkomen Rugs
Antique Turkoman Rug hand made from natural wool and organic dyes
1’6 x 5’6
Antique Rugs, Turkomen Rugs
Antique Turkoman Rug hand made from natural wool and organic dyes
2’4 x 4
Beluch 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.
2’4 x 4’6
Antique Rugs, Asmalyk
Antique Asmalyk Rug hand made with natural wool and organic dyes
2’3 x 3’6
Turkomen Rugs
Antique Turkoman hand made from natural wool and organic dyes
2’9 x 4’6
Beluch Rugs
Baluch Rugs – Antique Baluch rugs are a unique phenomenon in the world of antique Oriental rugs. Rather than originating from one specific, easily identified region, Baluch rugs are actually expressive of an extraordinarily wide range of styles.
4×3
Beluch Rugs
Baluch Rugs – Antique Baluch rugs are a unique phenomenon in the world of antique Oriental rugs. Rather than originating from one specific, easily identified region, Baluch rugs are actually expressive of an extraordinarily wide range of styles.
2’9 x 4’9
Turkomen Rugs
Antique Turkoman Rug made from natural wool and organic dyes
2’7 x 4
Antique Rugs
Hamadan has been a center for commercial carpet production. Unlike other areas that incorporated westernized styles, antique rugs from Hamadam feature localized designs that are occasionally limited to individual villages. The fragmented ethnic groups that have historically lived in Hamadan include Kurds, Azeri Turks and Islamic people
2 x 2’9
Isfahan Rugs
Isfahan Rugs – In the seventeenth century Isfahan emerged as the new, more centrally located capital of the Safavid dynasty, and it soon became a flourishing center of classical Persian art and culture supported directly by the patronage of the Safavid monarchs.
The carpets produced in Isfahan at this time entirely reflected this Golden Age of Safavid luxury and refinement, favoring as they did centralized medallion compositions filled with lush arabesque ornament produced with the greatest intricacy and precision.
2’5 x 3’7