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Thracian Kilim

Eastern European Thracian Kilim
Located in New York, NY
Eastern European Thracian Kilim, circa 1920 Handwoven.
Category

Vintage 1920s European More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Midcentury Turkish Floral Thracian Kilim
Located in Rio Vista, CA
Large Mid-Century Modern Turkish flat-weave Thracian Kilim featuring an arts and crafts style
Category

20th Century Turkish Arts and Crafts Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Vintage Handmade Bulgarian Thracian Kilim Flat Weave Rug c. Early 20th Century
Located in Westfield, MA
Vibrant and folkloric, this early 20th-century handmade Bulgarian Thracian kilim is a joyful
Category

Early 20th Century Bulgarian Kilim Russian and Scandinavian Rugs

Materials

Wool

Recent Sales

Modernist Thracian Kilim
Located in Milan, IT
background. This kilim was collected in Turkey a few years ago and it had been reputedly commissioned for a
Category

Vintage 1950s Turkish Mid-Century Modern Turkish Rugs

Modernist Thracian Kilim
Modernist Thracian Kilim
W 102.37 in L 59.45 in
Antique Thracian Sharköy Kilim Dated 1849
Located in Lyon, FR
Beautiful Thracian Sharköy Kilim. Made in 1849, this rare, fine Anatolian rug is influenced by the
Category

Antique Mid-19th Century Turkish Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

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Thracian Kilim For Sale on 1stDibs

With a vast inventory of beautiful furniture at 1stDibs, we’ve got just the thracian kilim you’re looking for. Each thracian kilim for sale was constructed with extraordinary care, often using fabric and wool. Your living room may not be complete without a thracian kilim — find older editions for sale from the 20th Century and newer versions made as recently as the 20th Century. A thracian kilim, designed in the Arts and Crafts style, is generally a popular piece of furniture.

How Much is a Thracian Kilim?

Prices for a thracian kilim can differ depending upon size, time period and other attributes — at 1stDibs, they begin at $1,426 and can go as high as $19,000, while the average can fetch as much as $4,269.

Finding the Right Turkish-rugs for You

Antique and vintage Turkish rugs, with their ruby reds and misted blues, their entwined botanical designs and rhythmic geometries, are as beloved today as they were in the 13th century, when the Turks of the Seljuk Empire began weaving these vibrant carpets in Anatolia.

A Turkish rug is simply one made in Turkey or the former Ottoman empire, employing the region’s unique traditional methods and weaves. Varieties range from flat-woven kilims to lush knotted rugs, known as hali, many of which are created with Ghiordes, or Turkish, knots. Whereas in other knots, the weft (crosswise) yarn is wrapped around one warp (lengthwise) yarn, in Ghiordes knots, it is wrapped around two, imparting lushness and durability. In addition to knotting techniques, Turkish rugs differ in their motifs — naturalistic or stylized, geometric or figurative — which often reflect the region where they were made.

The main types of Turkish rugs, as Milan-based carpet dealer Alfredo Levi explains it, are kilim, typified by a plain slit-tapestry weave, which leaves a gap, or slit, between sections woven with different yarns in different colors; sumak, made with weft wrapping, for a sturdier flat-woven carpet; and cicim, which he describes as “a type of sumak with extra brocade techniques typical of the tribes and villages of central Anatolia.

Within each type, there are various regional styles. Among these are Bergama carpets, characterized by bright reds and strong medallions; thick-piled Tulu rugs; and Konya rugs, which Marco Polo is said to have called “the most beautiful in the world.” With their strong tribal motifs and hot-red wefts of especially luxurious wool, Konya carpets are especially prized by collectors.

Also treasured are Oushak (or Ushak) rugs, with their complex, intricate designs and warm earth tones of saffron, cinnamon, blue, ivory and gold; and Hereke carpets, originally created exclusively for Ottoman sultans, using the finest silk. For Jason Nazmiyal, of New York carpet dealer Nazmiyal Antique Rugs, “a good Turkish rug is when the colors are harmonious.” This is true of both modern and antique Turkish rugs, but the hues have changed over the centuries, thanks to both technology and changes in culture and taste.

Patterns, too, have evolved. Although many weavers continue to produce traditional designs, others reinterpret their cultural heritage in contemporary terms, with bolder ornamentation and more geometric motifs. Contemporary Turkish rugs also are seldom made by hand and often incorporate synthetics into the weave, for cost-effectiveness and a durability suited to 21st-century life.

Find antique and vintage Turkish rugs for your home on 1stDibs. At The Study, read about how to take care of your antique or vintage rug as well as how to choose the right rug for your space.