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Peruvian Flat Weave

Vintage Peruvian Flat-Weave Rug with Stylized Chancay Design, in Small Room Size
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Peruvian flat-woven rug with a stylized 'Chancay' design, circa 1930. Size: 8'8 x 5'3
Category

Vintage 1930s Peruvian North and South American Rugs

Materials

Wool

Recent Sales

Antique Peruvian Navajo Flat weave Kilim, 4'11" x 6'10"
Located in Evanston, IL
Peruvian Kilims is using pairs and parallel warps and weft. Its designs and drawings are created by weaving
Category

Late 20th Century Peruvian Kilim North and South American Rugs

Materials

Wool

Peruvian Tribal Design Alpaca Rug
Located in Oakland Park, FL
Vintage Alpaca rug earth-tones, In shades of soft red, brown, tan. Peruvian Rug. Flat weave.
Category

Vintage 1970s Peruvian Tribal North and South American Rugs

Materials

Alpaca, Wool

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Pre-Columbian Inca Mantle with 16 Figures, Peru, 1476-1534 AD
Located in San Pedro Garza Garcia, Nuevo Leon
Inca Mantle with 16 figures in cubist form with multi-color fringes. This pieces with a Certificat de Bien Culturel from France. For the Incas finely worked and highly decorativ...
Category

Antique 15th Century and Earlier Peruvian Pre-Columbian Antiquities

Materials

Textile

Intricate Pre-Columbian Textile, Peru Ex Ferdinand Anton
Located in San Pedro Garza Garcia, Nuevo Leon
Extremely detailed yellow embroidered Pre-Columbian textile fragment with hints of red from the Chancay culture in Peru. This piece is framed in a black shadowbox. It is a wonder ...
Category

Antique 15th Century and Earlier Peruvian Pre-Columbian Antiquities

Materials

Textile

Vintage Peruvian Wool Rug
Located in West Palm Beach, FL
Age: 1950’s Pile: soft pile flatweave Wear Notes: 3 Material: Wool Vintage rugs are made by hand over the course of months, sometimes years. Their imperfections and wear...
Category

Vintage 1950s Peruvian Other North and South American Rugs

Materials

Wool

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Finding the Right Rugs And Carpets for You

Good antique rugs and vintage rugs have made their way into homes across the globe, becoming fixtures used for comfort, prayer and self-expression, so choosing the right area rug is officially a universal endeavor.

In modern usage, “carpet” typically denotes a wall-to-wall floor cushioning that is fixed to the floor. Rugs, on the other hand, are designed to cover a specific area and can easily be moved to new locations. However, the terms are interchangeable in many parts of the world, and, in the end, it won’t matter what you decide to call it.

It’s well known that a timeless Persian rug or vintage Turkish rug can warm any interior, but there are lots of other styles of antique rugs to choose from when you're endeavoring to introduce fresh colors and textures to a bedroom or living room.

Moroccan Berber rugs are not all about pattern. In fact, some of the most striking examples are nearly monochrome. But what these rugs lack in complexity, they make up for in brilliant color and subtle variation. Moroccan-style interiors can be mesmerizing — a sitting room of this type might feature a Moroccan rug, carved wooden screens and a tapestry hung behind the sofa.

Handwoven kilim rugs, known for their wealth of rich colors and unique weaving tradition, are pileless: Whereas the Beni Ourain rugs of Morocco can be described as dense with a thick surface or pile, an authentic kilim rug is thin and flat. (The term “kilim” is Turkish in origin, but this type of textile artistry is practiced all across the Balkans, throughout the Arab world and elsewhere.) 

When it comes to eye-catching floor coverings, the distinctive “medallion” pattern of Oushak rugs has two types of rounded shapes alternating against a rich red or blue background created with natural dyes, while the elaborate “star” pattern involves large eight-pointed shapes in diagonal rows alternating with diamonds.  

If you’re looking for something unexpected, find a runner rug that pops in your hallway or on your stairs. Dig for dazzling geometric patterns in our inventory of mid-century modern rugs and carpets, which includes works designed by the likes of Swedish textile masters Märta Måås-Fjetterström, Marianne Richter and other artisans. 

Carpets and rugs have been around for thousands of years. Prehistoric humans turned to animal skin, wool and fur to craft simple fabrics to soften hard terrain. A 2016 study suggests that "cave lions" were hunted for exactly this purpose, and that decorating your cave with their pelts may have conferred strength and prestige. Although many of these early textiles are still in existence, tracing their precise origins is difficult. Carpets quickly became such a valuable trade commodity that the weavings could easily travel far from their places of origin. 

The oldest known carpet was found in southern Siberia. (It may have traveled there from Persepolis in Iran.) For the flat-weave floor rugs crafted by Native Americans, cotton was the primary material before sheep’s wool was introduced in the 16th century. In Europe, carpet-making was fundamental to folk art, and Asian carpets imported to European countries were at one time considered a precious luxury and not intended to remain permanently on the floor. 

With the variety of area rugs and carpets rolled out for you on 1stDibs — a collection that includes traditional, modern, minimalist rugs and other coverings of all kinds — things will be looking up whenever you’re looking down. 

Questions About Peruvian Flat Weave
  • 1stDibs ExpertOctober 12, 2021
    A flat weave is a weaving technique in which wool or any other material is woven around warp thread pairs. When the rug is finished, these fibers form the entire surface. Unlike the conventional backing or pile seen on other rugs, the backing formed by weaving threads on a loom features a pattern that is reversible on both sides. A flat weave rug is created without any knots at all. Shop the vintage collection of flat weave rugs on 1stDibs.
  • Nazmiyal
    NazmiyalMarch 23, 2021
    Those are very thin rugs that have an almost blanket like texture.