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Turkish Rugs

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Turkish Rugs For Sale
Style: Art Nouveau
Style: Tulu
Antique Ghiordes Small Floral Runner
Located in New York, NY
An authentic small Turkish Ghiordes runner with a floral motif. Measures: 3'6'' x 7'.  
Category

Late 19th Century Turkish Art Nouveau Antique Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Vintage Turkish Konya Rug
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Turkish Konya carpet from the mid-20th century.
Category

Mid-20th Century Turkish Tulu Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Antique Turkish Ghiordes Runner
Located in New York, NY
A vivacious antique Turkish Ghiordes runner. Floral in the field and border. The ground is red, the border is ivory, accents in light blue and goldenrod, circa 1910. Measures: 3'6...
Category

Early 20th Century Turkish Art Nouveau Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Antique Tulu Rug with Modern-esque and Multiple Bands of Colors
Located in Atlanta, GA
Antique Tulu Rug with Modern-esque and Multiple Bands of Colors. This unique Tulu carpet bears a beautiful display of multiple bands in various color...
Category

1930s Turkish Tulu Vintage Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

"Yatak" Rug
Located in New York, NY
"Yatak" rug. A shag rug from Central Turkey, woven as a "yatak," a bed to sleep on. Very well preserved with wonderful wool and bright, cheerful colors.
Category

1950s Turkish Tulu Vintage Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Nigde Rug
Located in New York, NY
Nigde rug. Charming tribal rug from Central Turkey with fleecy wool and simple motifs.
Category

1950s Turkish Tulu Vintage Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Vintage Tulu Rug, circa 1940s
Located in New York, NY
This spot worn central Turkish coarsely knotted village rug has an abstract bitonal pattern of a noticeably abrashed long pile chocolate brown field set within an equally plain light...
Category

Mid-20th Century Turkish Tulu Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Antique Mocha Brown Square Kurdish Tulu with Terracotta Diamonds, Circa 1910
Located in Milan, IT
Tulu rugs represent one of the earliest forms of nomadic pile weaving, typically knotted with a medium-high pile as these were intended as bedding rugs for the tent. The patterns are...
Category

Early 20th Century Turkish Tulu Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

1960s Vintage Distressed Style Rug in Gold, Green Floral Patterns by Rug & Kilim
Located in Long Island City, NY
Hand-knotted in wool from Turkey circa 1960-1970, a vintage 7x10 distressed rug from a bold Turkish artist, joining Rug & Kilim’s Mid-Century Pasha Collection. Enjoying a beautif...
Category

1960s Turkish Art Nouveau Vintage Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Light Green Pink Paster Turkish Narrow Short Oushak Runner
Located in New York, NY
A mid-20th century Turkish runner with a beige green color open field design with specks of pink throughout encased by multiple narrow borders circa 1940, measures: 2'2" x 7'9".
Category

20th Century Turkish Tulu Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Vintage Indigo Blue Minimalist Tribal Rug
Located in Milan, IT
One of the must beautiful tribal rugs which we recently acquired, this gem is distinguished by an open field composed of various shades of blue arranged in striations against a geome...
Category

Mid-20th Century Turkish Tulu Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Vintage Minimalist Anatolian Copper Tulu Rug
Located in Milan, IT
A rare and relatively early example of central Anatolian Tulu rug, distinguished by a completely open field in a very unusual shade of copper. Tulus of this type are among the earlie...
Category

1930s Turkish Tulu Vintage Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Unique Turkish Tulu Rug with All-Over Paisley Design in Light Aubergine & Ivory
Located in Atlanta, GA
Turkish Tulu Rug with All-Over Paisley Design in Light Aubergine rug/en-281 origin/turkey The design of this beautiful Tulu rug is enhanced by its lustrous wool. Its faint aubergi...
Category

Mid-20th Century Turkish Tulu Turkish Rugs

Materials

Wool

Antique, New and Vintage Turkish Rugs

Antique, new 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, new 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.

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