Skip to main content

Silk Road Rug, Inc Turkish Rugs

to
Width
to
Length
to
16
2
1
16
2
16
16
4
16
16
16
16
14
14
14
14
Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Runner from Silk Road Rug Inc Collection
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Vintage Turkish Rug 22369, Country of Origin: Turkish Rugs, Circa Date: 1950 – This stunning Turkish rug is more than just a piece of decor – it is a work of art. It was woven in the...
Category

20th Century Turkish Tribal Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool, Cotton

Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Runner from Silk Road Rug Inc Collection
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Vintage Turkish Runner 6433, Country of Origin: Turkish Rugs, Circa Date: 1950 – This stunning Turkish rug is more than just a piece of decor – it is a work of art. It was woven in t...
Category

20th Century Turkish Tribal Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool, Cotton

Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Runner from Silk Road Rug Inc Collection
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Vintage Turkish Rug 4352, Country of Origin: Turkish Rugs, Circa Date: 1950 – This stunning Turkish rug is more than just a piece of decor – it is a work of art. It was woven in the ...
Category

20th Century Turkish Tribal Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool, Cotton

Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Runner from Silk Road Rug Inc Collection
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Vintage Turkish Rug 4351, Country of Origin: Turkish Rugs, Circa Date: 1950 – This stunning Turkish rug is more than just a piece of decor – it is a work of art. It was woven in the ...
Category

20th Century Turkish Tribal Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Runner from Silk Road Rug Inc Collection
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Vintage Turkish Rug 4348, Country of Origin: Turkish Rugs, Circa Date: 1950 – This stunning Turkish rug is more than just a piece of decor – it is a work of art. It was woven in the ...
Category

20th Century Tribal Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Runner from Silk Road Rug Inc Collection
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Vintage Turkish Rug 4345, Country of Origin: Turkish Rugs, Circa Date: 1950 – This stunning Turkish rug is more than just a piece of decor – it is a work of art. It was woven in the ...
Category

20th Century Turkish Tribal Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Runner from Silk Road Rug Inc Collection
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Vintage Turkish Runner 4341, Country of Origin: Turkish Rugs, Circa Date: 1950 – This stunning Turkish rug is more than just a piece of decor – it is a work of art. It was woven in t...
Category

20th Century Turkish Tribal Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Runner from Silk Road Rug Inc Collection
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Vintage Turkish Runner 4336, Country of Origin: Turkish Rugs, Circa Date: 1950 – This stunning Turkish rug is more than just a piece of decor – it is a work of art. It was woven in t...
Category

20th Century Turkish Organic Modern Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Runner from Silk Road Rug Inc Collection
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Vintage Turkish Rug 4333, Country of Origin: Turkish Rugs, Circa Date: 1950 – This stunning Turkish rug is more than just a piece of decor – it is a work of art. It was woven in the ...
Category

20th Century Organic Modern Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Runner from Silk Road Rug Inc Collection
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Vintage Turkish Rug 4291, Country of Origin: Turkish Rugs, Circa Date: 1950 – This stunning Turkish rug is more than just a piece of decor – it is a work of art. It was woven in the ...
Category

20th Century Turkish Modern Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool, Cotton

Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Runner from Silk Road Rug Inc Collection
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Vintage Turkish Rug 4288, Country of Origin: Turkish Rugs, Circa Date: 1950 – This stunning Turkish rug is more than just a piece of decor – it is a work of art. It was woven in the ...
Category

20th Century Turkish Tribal Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Runner from Silk Road Rug Inc Collection
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Vintage Turkish Runner 4286, Country of Origin: Turkish Rugs, Circa Date: 1950 – This stunning Turkish rug is more than just a piece of decor – it is a work of art. It was woven in t...
Category

20th Century Turkish Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Large Vintage Flat weave Kilim Rug 12'7" x 19'6"
Located in Los Angeles, CA
The vintage Turkish kilim rug dating back to circa 1950's. It was hand woven using the best quality wool blend, which ensured both its softness and great durability. Its pattern feat...
Category

20th Century Turkish Kilim Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Large Vintage Flatweave Kilim Rug 13'10" x 22'2"
Located in Los Angeles, CA
The vintage Turkish kilim rug dating back to circa 1950's. It was hand woven using the best quality wool blend, which ensured both its softness and great durability. Its pattern feat...
Category

20th Century Turkish Kilim Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Vintage Art Deco 1950s Wool Area Rug in Green Red Yellow Colors
Located in Los Angeles, CA
This Art Deco style rug features a bold all-over design of geometric and linear abstractions in red, blue & yellow against a field of light greens. This is a mid-century wool piece h...
Category

Late 20th Century Turkish Art Deco Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Vintage Art Deco 1950s Wool Area Rug in Dark / Light Brown
Located in Los Angeles, CA
This Art Deco style rug features a bold all-over design of geometric and linear abstractions in cool dark brown against a field of light brown. This is a mid-century wool piece hand-...
Category

Late 20th Century Turkish Art Deco Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Related Items
handmade Silk Hereke Rug, Turkey, 20th Century
Located in London, GB
Exquisite design and quality workmanship silk Hereke rug - a true masterpiece that will elevate the decor of any space. This rug has been hand-knotted with great care and precision t...
Category

20th Century Turkish Turkish Rugs

Materials

Silk

Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Anatolian Long Runner
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Turkish Anatolian long runner handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 2' 11" x 15' 5".
Category

Mid-20th Century Turkish Tribal Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Vintage Turkish Wool Runner Rug
Located in Norwalk, CT
Beautiful vintage runner rug, hand knotted wool with a blush field, pink and gray accents in multi medallion design. This rug measures 2' 10" x 14' 3" circa 1940.
Category

Mid-20th Century Turkish Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Khotan Style Runner
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Turkish runner, in the style of East Turkestan Khotan carpets, handmade during the mid-20th century.
Category

Mid-20th Century Turkish Khotan Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Anatolian Throw Rug
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Turkish Anatolian throw rug handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 1' 7" x 2' 4"
Category

Mid-20th Century Turkish Tribal Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Anatolian Runner
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Turkish Anatolian runner handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 3' 1" x 10' 9".
Category

Mid-20th Century Turkish Tribal Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Anatolian Runner
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Turkish Anatolian rug in runner format handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 2' 7" x 7' 4" Turkish rugs & carpets: Until the Great Persian Carpet Revival in the later 19th century, the “Oriental rug” was Turkish. For nearly six centuries, Turkish rugs, both scatter, room size, and even larger, thoroughly dominated the European import market. Whereas the Persian carpet can be divided into urban, village, and tribal types, in Turkey and its predecessor the Ottoman Empire, rugs almost exclusively came from village weavers and from a small number of urban workshops. Ninety percent village, nine percent city, one percent tribal. Turkish weavers have, with very few exceptions, always worked with the symmetric (Turkish) knot. Wool foundations are standard practice among both town and village weavers. The exceptions, very finely woven 20th century and recent Herekeh silks from near Istanbul, and early 17th century Ottoman Court rugs from Bursa, constitute only a tiny part of the total. Always pricey, they appealed and still appeal to the clients who want lots of knots and perfect execution instead of individual personality. The urban workshops have been centered around the western Turkish city of Oushak and its attendant port town of Smyrna. Oushak weaves with the trends in fashion. When color saturated medallion carpets were needed, Oushak was ready in the 17th and 18th centuries. When coarse red and blue carpets were required, Oushak and Smyrna in the 19th century wove them by the boatload. When tastes changed again, and the European dealers in Smyrna wanted room size carpets with lighter and unusual colors, and with Persianate designs, production ramped up in nearby Oushak. Those antique, all-wool construction turn-of-the-century carpets are still in high demand with designers. Antique carpets with allover, roughly drawn patterns on grounds of shrimp, rust, straw, cream, pale blue, and pale and pea green, hitherto unavailable colors, are in such demand today that contemporary Oushaks have attempted to mimic them with soft palettes, extra-large scale drawing and coarse weaves. Oushaks woven for the Turkish market, for palaces, houses and mosques were often oversize with large, repeating medallions, all in shades of (Turkey) red, dark blue, light blue-teal, and ivory, with lemon and green accents. Turkey, along with India, invented standard sizes. By vertically repeating the medallion, one could get one medallion, one with two end halves, two, three, etc. medallions, up to thirty or so feet in length. The process spared making new cartoons for each length and allowed a quicker turnaround time. Oushak, from the time of 15th century “Holbein” rugs onward, has always been a commercial center. The prayer niche directional rug is primarily a Turkish development. In the towns and villages east of Oushak, in Ghiordes, Kula, Ladik, Kirsehir, Mucur and Konya, among others, arch pattern scatters with bright palettes and weaves varying from relatively fine to moderate were almost the entire production. Antique examples were particularly popular in America around 1900. Other centers of village weaving were situated on the western coast and adjacent islands with the town of Melas and neighboring villages weaving geometric prayer rugs and scatters with a characteristic khaki green and lots of yellow. The other large region was in the northwest of Anatolia, near ancient Troy, with the sizable town of Bergama at its center. The satellite towns of Ezine, Karakecilli, Yuntdag, and Canakkale all wove colorful scatters with moderate weaves in all wool with geometric designs and cheerful palettes. Near to Istanbul, these were among the first Turkish rugs to reach Europe in the Renaissance. The earliest Turkish pieces depicted in Italian Old Master paintings display the so-called “Memling gul”, an allover panel pattern with hooked and stepped elements within the reserves. This pattern continues for centuries in the Konya area and in the Caucasus as well. Turkey is a land of villages and much of the most interesting Turkish weaving comes from one undiscovered village or another. The Konya-Cappadocia region of central Turkey includes the active towns of Karapinar, Karaman, Obruk, Sizma, and Tashpinar, all weaving Konya-esque scatters and long rugs. Karapinar has been active the longest, since the 17th century. The mosques in and around Konya have preserved locally-made rugs from the fourteenth. In the 20th century, the extra-long pile, many wefted Tulu rug was devised, with limited palettes and color block patterns. These are not really antique Tulus, but they must be a product of long-standing village tradition. There are thousands upon thousands of rural Turkish villages, almost all with easy access to local tribal wool. Rug students are discovering new names and rug types almost daily. The common denominators are bright colors, geometric designs, wool construction, moderate to coarse weaves and symmetric knots. Synthetic dyes hit the Turkish rug industry quickly and hard after 1870, and they penetrated to even the most off-the-beaten-track villages. This development was almost entirely negative. The village weavers used fugitive or overly bright dyes which ruined the color harmonies built up over centuries. Characteristic types disappeared or were negatively transmuted. The Turkish village rug of the 1870 to 1920 period is nothing to be proud of. In the eastern provinces, the semi-nomadic Kurdish tribes, collectively called ‘Yuruks’, weave all wool, geometric pieces with medium to medium-coarse weaves, as well as kilims and other flatweaves. The rugs employ cochineal instead of madder for the reds, mustard yellows, greens, and various blues. They are under-collected like the Persian Afshars. Their rugs are in scatter and long rug formats. The far eastern Turkish town of Erzerum has a long tradition of idiosyncratic, semi-workshop rugs and further to the east is Kars with a tradition of rugs in the Caucasian Kazak manner. One Turkish specialty is the Yastiks or cushion cover, made in pairs for the public living rooms of village houses. These are larger rugs in miniature and good ones are highly collectible. Like other Turkish rustic weavings, ones with synthetic dyes are almost totally undesirable. Only the tribal Baluch make similar cushion covers, known as pushtis or balishts, in the same small, oblong format. Yastiks always have a back, usually in plain weave, so that they can be easily stuffed. When the Imperial Carpet Factory at Herekeh near Istanbul closed in the early 20th century, the highly proficient Armenian master weavers set up in the Kum Kapi district of Istanbul where they wove all-silk, exquisitely fine and elaborately detailed small pieces, sometimes enriched with metal thread, for the most discriminating European buyers. Today the best, signed Kum Kapi pieces, usually in the “Sultan’s head” prayer niche design, can fetch upwards of $100,000. They are strictly for the wall. An Interwar all-silk room size Kum Kapi carpet is both exceedingly rare and stratospherically priced. The workshops closed in the 1930s, but the weaving of extremely fine, all-silk small rugs in Herekeh was revived in the 1960s. There has been a recent vogue for larger Turkish village vintage...
Category

Mid-20th Century Turkish Modern Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Sivas Runner
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Turkish Sivas rug in runner format handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 2' 10" x 7' 4" Turkish rugs & carpets: Until the Great Persian Carpet Revival in the later 19th century, the “Oriental rug” was Turkish. For nearly six centuries, Turkish rugs, both scatter, room size, and even larger, thoroughly dominated the European import market. Whereas the Persian carpet can be divided into urban, village, and tribal types, in Turkey and its predecessor the Ottoman Empire, rugs almost exclusively came from village weavers and from a small number of urban workshops. Ninety percent village, nine percent city, one percent tribal. Turkish weavers have, with very few exceptions, always worked with the symmetric (Turkish) knot. Wool foundations are standard practice among both town and village weavers. The exceptions, very finely woven 20th century and recent Herekeh silks from near Istanbul, and early 17th century Ottoman Court rugs from Bursa, constitute only a tiny part of the total. Always pricey, they appealed and still appeal to the clients who want lots of knots and perfect execution instead of individual personality. The urban workshops have been centered around the western Turkish city of Oushak and its attendant port town of Smyrna. Oushak weaves with the trends in fashion. When color saturated medallion carpets were needed, Oushak was ready in the 17th and 18th centuries. When coarse red and blue carpets...
Category

Mid-20th Century Turkish Victorian Turkish Rugs

Materials

Cotton

Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Flatweave Kilim Accent Rug
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Turkish flatweave Kilim accent rug handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 6' 8" x 8' 8".
Category

Mid-20th Century Turkish Tribal Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Oushak Runner
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Turkish Oushak rug in runner format handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 3' 1" x 11' 7" Until the Great Persian Carpet Revival in the later 19th century, the “Oriental rug” was Turkish. For nearly six centuries, Turkish rugs, both scatter, room size, and even larger, thoroughly dominated the European import market. Whereas the Persian carpet can be divided into urban, village, and tribal types, in Turkey and its predecessor the Ottoman Empire, rugs almost exclusively came from village weavers and from a small number of urban workshops. Ninety percent village, nine percent city, one percent tribal. Turkish weavers have, with very few exceptions, always worked with the symmetric (Turkish) knot. Wool foundations are standard practice among both town and village weavers. The exceptions, very finely woven 20th century and recent Herekeh silks from near Istanbul, and early 17th century Ottoman Court rugs from Bursa, constitute only a tiny part of the total. Always pricey, they appealed and still appeal to the clients who want lots of knots and perfect execution instead of individual personality. The urban workshops have been centered around the western Turkish city of Oushak and its attendant port town of Smyrna. Oushak weaves with the trends in fashion. When color saturated medallion carpets were needed, Oushak was ready in the 17th and 18th centuries. When coarse red and blue carpets...
Category

Mid-20th Century Turkish Rustic Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Art Deco Style Runner
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Turkish Art Deco style runner handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures:
Category

Mid-20th Century Turkish Art Deco Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Tribal Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Anatolian Runner
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Turkish Anatolian tribal runner handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 2' 8" x 13' 10"
Category

Mid-20th Century Turkish Tribal Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Recently Viewed

View All