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Item Ships From: Manhattan
Mid-20th Century Handmade Persian Malayer Throw Rug
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Persian Malayer throw rug handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 3' 5" x 5' 11".
Category

Mid-20th Century Persian Rustic Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Contemporary Handmade Turkish Flatweave Kilim Oversize Carpet
Located in New York, NY
A contemporary Turkish flatweave Kilim large oversize carpet handmade during the 21st century. Measures: 16' 0" x 20' 8".
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Turkish Modern Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Vintage Handmade Turkish Flat-Weave Kilim Accent Rug
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Turkish flat-weave Kilim accent rug handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 6' 5" x 10' 8".
Category

Mid-20th Century Turkish Mid-Century Modern Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Contemporary Turkish Flatweave Patchwork Throw Rug
Located in New York, NY
A contemporary Turkish flatweave Kilim throw rug handmade during the 21st century. This patchwork-style rug consists of hand-weaving together several...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Turkish Modern Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Galerie Shabab Collection Mid-20th Century Turkish Tribal Room Size Carpet
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Turkish Anatolian tribal room size carpet handmade during the Mid-20th Century. Measures: 9' 11" x 12' 10".
Category

Mid-20th Century Turkish Tribal Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Flat-Weave Kilim Room Size Carpet
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Turkish flat-weave Kilim room size carpet handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 10' 5" x 13' 5" Flat-weave rugs & carpets: Knotted pile rugs are just one small part of a vast universe of textile techniques suitable for heavy use. If you can imagine it, some weaver has tried it out. Pieces can be roughly divided into those reversible from the start and those never, or at least not initially, reversible. Thus, kilims are considered reversible, while everything else is not. Kilims are tapestry woven rugs with both sides the same, in either slit technique where colors change, or with various methods of avoiding slits. Slit tapestry weave goes back to ancient times and Coptic Egyptian weavers used it for ornaments on garments and larger wall hangings. Slits can be avoided by dovetailing of colors (warp sharing) or by interlocking the wefts. The Navajo weavers of the Southwest practice the first while the fine shawl weavers of Kashmir and Kerman employed the second. Interlocking produces a one-faced fabric, with smooth and rough, ridged faces. The typical Turkish, Caucasian, or Persian rustic kilim shows slits, but never long ones. Aubusson French carpets are also slit tapestries and the long color transitions are sewn up as part of the regular maintenance. Some kilims are very fine. The best antique urban Sehna (Senna) kilims on wool, cotton or silk warps approximate the comparable rugs in refinement and are the most desirable of all Persian kilims. Although the various flatweave techniques are usually expressed in geometric, simple, often repeating, patterns, Sehna kilims demonstrate that even the most intricate designs can be effectively rendered in flat-stich. The term ‘kilim’ has been extended to cover any pileless, weft-faced heavy textile. Thus, the sectioned and joined northeastern Persian horizontally striped wool rugs are called ‘kilims’. So are the plain-weave end finishes of pile rugs. All these are weft-faced, weft patterned flatweaves. These sectioned pieces are woven not on a frame loom, but one steadied by the weaver at one end and with the warps fastened down at the other. Only relatively recent have these tribal pieces become available. They are used as floorcoverings, hangings, room dividers, furniture covers. They are mostly bitonal in shades of natural dark brown and beige. Some more recent pieces show weaver innovations with ikat and moire effects. Work proceeds quickly and a skilled weaver can complete a thirty foot strip in almost no time. Wefts, the elements added as weaving progresses, play an essential part in what is a flatweave. The best-known example of an extra-weft, wrapping technique is on Caucasian and tribal Persian Soumaks, where a pattern weft wraps around the fixed warp, changing as weaving progresses. Soumaks can be large carpets, Kuba in the Caucasus, small bag faces (Caucasian and Persian Shah Savan saddle bags), or cover scatter rugs (Persian Afshars). The Soumak technique is fast, and a weaver can work much more quickly than tying knots. The left-over wefts are cut off on the back, so the front and back are initially different. As a Soumak on the floor gets used, these weft yarns wear away and the two sides converge although the exact texture remains distinct. There are other ways of pattern by weft. Often on smaller tribal pieces, the pattern weft(s) is (are) part of the weft structure, moving in an out, and holding the whole thing together. These wefts can be complementary or added (supplementary), continuous across the flatweave or cut off as they travel unneeded across the verso. Supplementary weft flatweaves are often very compact and substantial. The nomadic Turkmen and Balouch tribes employ both supplementary and complementary weft techniques on their pieces. Supplementary wefts are often raised on the recto (front) while complementary wefts are flat to the surface. Tribal Kurds employ this extra-wefting technique. The Balouch of Pakistan use complementary wefts almost exclusively on their small woven paraphernalia like salt bags. Flatweave techniques may be combined on a single piece. Afshar rugs employ plain-weave end strips, preceded by Soumak bands, with pile sections between. The large Bakhtiari saddlebags feature Soumak work, pile “islands” an areas of plain-weave. Qashqai rugs and kilims frequently displays checkerboard end strips in continuous, complementary wefting. Another distinct flatweave type is the jajim (jijim, cecim) in which a pattern is added with colored wefts as the weaving of the plain-weave ground progresses. Here the wefts are discontinuous and the pattern stands proud from the voided ground. Often made in two pieces on narrow looms and edge-sewn together, these may have geometric patterns. The term ‘jajim’ also refers to the assembled warp-faced strip and stripe covers from the Shah Savan of northwest Persia, the pattern is defined by warps alone, usually in plain stripes, but sometimes in designs of ladders, snakes, human figures and various animals. Here the color changing warps are continuous. Most are wool, a few are silk. Better to call these something else. Indian ‘Dhurries’ are all cotton kilims and ‘shatrangis’ employ wool wefts on cotton warps. Dhurries are slitless. The cotton texture is more appropriate to the humid and warm climate of the Indian subcontinent. Modern Dhurries...
Category

Mid-20th Century Turkish Modern Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Nazmiyal Antique Vase Design Persian Tabriz Rug. Size: 12 ft 10 in x 19 ft 6 in
Located in New York, NY
Beautiful Large Antique Vase Design Persian Tabriz Rug, Country of Origin / Rug type: Persian Rug, Circa Date: 1920 – Size: 12 ft 10 in x...
Category

Early 20th Century Persian Tabriz Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Schumacher Zebre 10' x 14' Hand-Knotted Rug In Ivory/ Black
By Schumacher
Located in New York, NY
This rug will ship in December. A wildly chic hand-knotted design made of wool and cotton, Zebre features a large-scale abstract animal pattern. Inspired by our popular Ze’bre Epingl...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Cotton

White & Beige Contemporary Handmade Turkish Flatweave Kilim Room Size Carpet
Located in New York, NY
A contemporary Turkish flatweave Kilim large room size carpet handmade during the 21st century in shades of white and beige. This patchwork style rug consists of hand-weaving togethe...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Turkish Modern Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Persian Serab Runner
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Persian Serab rug in runner format handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 2' 11" x 14' 10" Persian Rugs & Carpets: Persia (Iran) is a moderately large country with a very long history and an enormous art...
Category

Mid-20th Century Persian Rustic Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Vintage American Hook Rug
Located in New York, NY
A vintage American Hook carpet from the second quarter of the 20th century. Measures: 7' 10" x 8' 7"
Category

Mid-20th Century American American Colonial Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Fabric

Vintage American Hook Rug
Vintage American Hook Rug
$5,000 Sale Price
20% Off
Mid-20th Century Handmade Persian Malayer Accent Rug
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Persian Malayer accent rug handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 4' 1" x 6' 7".
Category

Mid-20th Century Persian Rustic Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

21st Century Handmade Persian Gabbeh Throw Rug
Located in New York, NY
A modern Persian Gabbeh throw rug handmade during the 21st century. Measures: 3' 5" x 4' 7".
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Persian Tribal Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Persian Malayer Accent Rug
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Persian Malayer accent rug handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 4' 8" x 6' 10".
Category

Mid-20th Century Persian Rustic Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Persian Malayer Accent Rug
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Persian Malayer accent rug handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 4' 9" x 6' 9".
Category

Mid-20th Century Rustic Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Early 20th Century Persian Sultanabad Room Size Carpet In Light Blue and Beige
Located in New York, NY
An antique Persian Sultanabad room size carpet handmade during the early 20th century with a light blue field and beige border. Measures: 8' 11" x 11' 8".
Category

Early 20th Century Persian Sultanabad Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Persian Flatweave Kilim Accent Rug
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Persian flatweave Kilim accent rug handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 6' 8" x 8' 4".
Category

Mid-20th Century Persian Bohemian Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Tribal Mid-20th Century Handmade Persian Bakhtiari Pictorial Square Accent Rug
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Persian Pictorial accent rug in square format handmade by the Bakhtiari nomadic tribe during the mid-20th century with a pictorial design of an androgynous figure...
Category

Mid-20th Century Persian Tribal Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Early 20th Century Handmade Persian Malayer Runner
Located in New York, NY
An antique Persian Malayer rug in runner format handmade during the early 20th century. Measures: 2' 0" x 14' 6" Persian Rugs & Carpets: Persia (Iran) is a moderately large co...
Category

Early 20th Century Persian Victorian Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Contemporary Handmade Persian Flat-Weave Kilim Accent Rug
Located in New York, NY
A modern Persian flat-weave Kilim accent rug handmade during the 21st century. Measures: 3' 5" x 6' 8" Flat-weave rugs & carpets: Knotted pile rugs are just one small part of a vast universe of textile techniques suitable for heavy use. If you can imagine it, some weaver has tried it out. Pieces can be roughly divided into those reversible from the start and those never, or at least not initially, reversible. Thus, kilims are considered reversible, while everything else is not. Kilims are tapestry woven rugs with both sides the same, in either slit technique where colors change, or with various methods of avoiding slits. Slit tapestry weave goes back to ancient times and Coptic Egyptian...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Persian Modern Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Persian Flatweave Kilim Accent Rug
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Persian flatweave Kilim accent rug handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 6' 8" x 7' 2".
Category

Mid-20th Century Persian Rustic Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Flat-Weave Kilim Accent Carpet
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Turkish flat-weave Kilim accent carpet handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 6' 10" x 9' 7" Flat-weave rugs & carpets: Knotted pile rugs are just one small part of a vast universe of textile techniques suitable for heavy use. If you can imagine it, some weaver has tried it out. Pieces can be roughly divided into those reversible from the start and those never, or at least not initially, reversible. Thus, kilims are considered reversible, while everything else is not. Kilims are tapestry woven rugs with both sides the same, in either slit technique where colors change, or with various methods of avoiding slits. Slit tapestry weave goes back to ancient times and Coptic Egyptian weavers used it for ornaments on garments and larger wall hangings. Slits can be avoided by dovetailing of colors (warp sharing) or by interlocking the wefts. The Navajo weavers of the Southwest practice the first while the Fine shawl weavers of Kashmir and Kerman employed the second. Interlocking produces a one-faced fabric, with smooth and rough, ridged faces. The typical Turkish, Caucasian, or Persian rustic Kilim shows slits, but never long ones. Aubusson French carpets are also slit tapestries and the long color transitions are sewn up as part of the regular maintenance. Some kilims are very Fine. The best antique urban Sehna (Senna) kilims on wool, cotton or silk warps approximate the comparable rugs in refinement and are the most desirable of all Persian kilims. Although the various flatweave techniques are usually expressed in geometric, simple, often repeating, patterns, Sehna kilims demonstrate that even the most intricate designs can be effectively rendered in flat-stich. The term ‘Kilim’ has been extended to cover any pileless, weft-faced heavy textile. Thus, the sectioned and joined northeastern Persian horizontally striped wool rugs are called ‘kilims’. So are the plain-weave end finishes of pile rugs. All these are weft-faced, weft patterned flatweaves. These sectioned pieces are woven not on a frame loom, but one steadied by the weaver at one end and with the warps fastened down at the other. Only relatively recent have these tribal pieces become available. They are used as floorcoverings, hangings, room dividers, furniture covers. They are mostly bitonal in shades of natural dark brown and beige. Some more recent pieces show weaver innovations with ikat and moire effects. Work proceeds quickly and a skilled weaver can complete a thirty foot strip in almost no time. Wefts, the elements added as weaving progresses, play an essential part in what is a flatweave. The best-known example of an extra-weft, wrapping technique is on Caucasian and tribal Persian Soumaks, where a pattern weft wraps around the fixed warp, changing as weaving progresses. Soumaks can be large carpets, Kuba in the Caucasus, small bag faces (Caucasian and Persian Shah Savan saddle bags), or cover scatter rugs (Persian Afshars). The Soumak technique is fast, and a weaver can work much more quickly than tying knots. The left-over wefts are cut off on the back, so the front and back are initially different. As a Soumak on the floor gets used, these weft yarns wear away and the two sides converge although the exact texture remains distinct. There are other ways of pattern by weft. Often on smaller tribal pieces, the pattern weft(s) is (are) part of the weft structure, moving in an out, and holding the whole thing together. These wefts can be complementary or added (supplementary), continuous across the flatweave or cut off as they travel unneeded across the verso. Supplementary weft flatweaves are often very compact and substantial. The nomadic Turkmen and Balouch tribes employ both supplementary and complementary weft techniques on their pieces. Supplementary wefts are often raised on the recto (front) while complementary wefts are flat to the surface. Tribal Kurds employ this extra-wefting technique. The Balouch of Pakistan use complementary wefts almost exclusively on their small woven paraphernalia like salt bags. Flatweave techniques may be combined on a single piece. Afshar rugs employ plain-weave end strips, preceded by Soumak bands, with pile sections between. The large Bakhtiari saddlebags feature Soumak work, pile “islands” an areas of plain-weave. Qashqai rugs and kilims frequently displays checkerboard end strips in continuous, complementary wefting. Another distinct flatweave type is the jajim (jijim, cecim) in which a pattern is added with colored wefts as the weaving of the plain-weave ground progresses. Here the wefts are discontinuous and the pattern stands proud from the voided ground. Often made in two pieces on narrow looms and edge-sewn together, these may have geometric patterns. The term ‘jajim’ also refers to the assembled warp-faced strip and stripe covers from the Shah Savan of northwest Persia, the pattern is defined by warps alone, usually in plain stripes, but sometimes in designs of ladders, snakes, human figures and various animals. Here the color changing warps are continuous. Most are wool, a few are silk. Better to call these something else. Indian ‘Dhurries’ are all cotton kilims and ‘shatrangis’ employ wool wefts on cotton warps. Dhurries are slitless. The cotton texture is more appropriate to the humid and warm climate of the Indian subcontinent. Modern Dhurries...
Category

Mid-20th Century Turkish Tribal Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Rustic Early 20th Century Handmade Persian Kurd Throw Rug in Red & Cream
Located in New York, NY
An antique Persian Kurd throw rug handmade during the early 20th century in shades of red and cream with an overall rustic appeal with its flat-...
Category

Early 20th Century Persian Rustic Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Antique Turkish Oushak Decorative Oriental Rug, in Room Size, with Muted Colors
Located in New York, NY
An antique Turkish Oushak oriental carpet, size 13'2 x 10'3, circa 1910. This lovely decorative carpet features a diffuse central medallion on a subtly hued central field, which is e...
Category

1910s Turkish Vintage Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Flat-Weave Kilim Room Size Carpet
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Turkish flat-weave Kilim room size carpet handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 10' 7" x 12' 9" Flat-weave rugs & carpets: Knotted pile rugs are just one small part of a vast universe of textile techniques suitable for heavy use. If you can imagine it, some weaver has tried it out. Pieces can be roughly divided into those reversible from the start and those never, or at least not initially, reversible. Thus, kilims are considered reversible, while everything else is not. Kilims are tapestry woven rugs with both sides the same, in either slit technique where colors change, or with various methods of avoiding slits. Slit tapestry weave goes back to ancient times and Coptic...
Category

Mid-20th Century Turkish Modern Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Nazmiyal Collection Large Geometric Central Asian Rug. 13 ft 8 in x 15 ft 3 in
Located in New York, NY
Nazmiyal Collection Large Geometric Central Asian Rug, Country of Origin: Central Asia, Circa date: Modern  
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Central Asian Other Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century, Handmade Persian Karajeh Throw Rug
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Persian Karajeh throw rug handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 1' 11" x 2' 10".
Category

Mid-20th Century Persian Tribal Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Contemporary Handmade Turkish Flat-Weave Kilim Colorful Large Room Size Carpet
Located in New York, NY
A modern Turkish flat-weave Kilim large room size carpet handmade during the 21st century with a colorful horizontally striped pattern. A statement piece with its bright and whimsica...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Turkish Modern Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Persian Mahal Throw Rug
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Persian Mahal throw rug handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 2' 5" x 4' 10".
Category

Mid-20th Century Persian Rustic Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Sivas Accent Rug in Cream and Mauve
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Turkish Sivas accent rug handmade during the mid-20th century with an all-over tone on tone field and border combination in cream and blonde separated and distinguished onl...
Category

Mid-20th Century Turkish Rustic Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Rustic Mid-20th Century Handmade Persian Karajeh Small Runner
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Persian Karajeh rug in small runner format with a rustic appeal handmade during the early 20th century. Measures: 1' 11" x 5' 7" Persian Rugs & Carpets: Persia (Iran...
Category

Mid-20th Century Persian Tribal Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Highly Artistic And Rare Antique European Silk and Velvet Textile 2'2" x 7'11"
Located in New York, NY
Highly Artistic And Rare Antique European Silk and Velvet Textile, Origin: Europe, Approx. Circa Date: Nineteenth Century
Category

19th Century English Art Nouveau Antique Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Silk

Antique Persian Khorassan Rug. Size: 11 ft 3 in x 16 ft 3 in
Located in New York, NY
Large Brown Colored Finely Woven Antique Persian Khorassan Rug, Country of Origin: Persia, Circa Date: Turn of the 20th Century. Size: 11 ft 3 in x 16 ft 3 in (3.43 m x 4.95 m) A ...
Category

Early 20th Century Persian Khorassan Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Flatweave Kilim Room Size Carpet
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Turkish flatweave Kilim room size carpet handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 9' 11" x 13' 3".
Category

Mid-20th Century Turkish Rustic Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Turkish Flat-Weave Kilim Room Size Carpet
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Turkish flat-weave Kilim room size carpet handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 10' 7" x 13' 7" Flat-weave rugs & carpets: Knotted pile rugs are just one small part of a vast universe of textile techniques suitable for heavy use. If you can imagine it, some weaver has tried it out. Pieces can be roughly divided into those reversible from the start and those never, or at least not initially, reversible. Thus, kilims are considered reversible, while everything else is not. Kilims are tapestry woven rugs with both sides the same, in either slit technique where colors change, or with various methods of avoiding slits. Slit tapestry weave goes back to ancient times and Coptic Egyptian weavers used it for ornaments on garments and larger wall hangings. Slits can be avoided by dovetailing of colors (warp sharing) or by interlocking the wefts. The Navajo weavers of the Southwest practice the first while the fine shawl weavers of Kashmir and Kerman employed the second. Interlocking produces a one-faced fabric, with smooth and rough, ridged faces. The typical Turkish, Caucasian, or Persian rustic kilim shows slits, but never long ones. Aubusson French carpets are also slit tapestries and the long color transitions are sewn up as part of the regular maintenance. Some kilims are very fine. The best antique urban Sehna (Senna) kilims on wool, cotton or silk warps approximate the comparable rugs in refinement and are the most desirable of all Persian kilims. Although the various flatweave techniques are usually expressed in geometric, simple, often repeating, patterns, Sehna kilims demonstrate that even the most intricate designs can be effectively rendered in flat-stich. The term ‘kilim’ has been extended to cover any pileless, weft-faced heavy textile. Thus, the sectioned and joined northeastern Persian horizontally striped wool rugs are called ‘kilims’. So are the plain-weave end finishes of pile rugs. All these are weft-faced, weft patterned flatweaves. These sectioned pieces are woven not on a frame loom, but one steadied by the weaver at one end and with the warps fastened down at the other. Only relatively recent have these tribal pieces become available. They are used as floorcoverings, hangings, room dividers, furniture covers. They are mostly bitonal in shades of natural dark brown and beige. Some more recent pieces show weaver innovations with ikat and moire effects. Work proceeds quickly and a skilled weaver can complete a thirty foot strip in almost no time. Wefts, the elements added as weaving progresses, play an essential part in what is a flatweave. The best-known example of an extra-weft, wrapping technique is on Caucasian and tribal Persian Soumaks, where a pattern weft wraps around the fixed warp, changing as weaving progresses. Soumaks can be large carpets, Kuba in the Caucasus, small bag faces (Caucasian and Persian Shah Savan saddle bags), or cover scatter rugs (Persian Afshars). The Soumak technique is fast, and a weaver can work much more quickly than tying knots. The left-over wefts are cut off on the back, so the front and back are initially different. As a Soumak on the floor gets used, these weft yarns wear away and the two sides converge although the exact texture remains distinct. There are other ways of pattern by weft. Often on smaller tribal pieces, the pattern weft(s) is (are) part of the weft structure, moving in an out, and holding the whole thing together. These wefts can be complementary or added (supplementary), continuous across the flatweave or cut off as they travel unneeded across the verso. Supplementary weft flatweaves are often very compact and substantial. The nomadic Turkmen and Balouch tribes employ both supplementary and complementary weft techniques on their pieces. Supplementary wefts are often raised on the recto (front) while complementary wefts are flat to the surface. Tribal Kurds employ this extra-wefting technique. The Balouch of Pakistan use complementary wefts almost exclusively on their small woven paraphernalia like salt bags. Flatweave techniques may be combined on a single piece. Afshar rugs employ plain-weave end strips, preceded by Soumak bands, with pile sections between. The large Bakhtiari saddlebags feature Soumak work, pile “islands” an areas of plain-weave. Qashqai rugs and kilims frequently displays checkerboard end strips in continuous, complementary wefting. Another distinct flatweave type is the jajim (jijim, cecim) in which a pattern is added with colored wefts as the weaving of the plain-weave ground progresses. Here the wefts are discontinuous and the pattern stands proud from the voided ground. Often made in two pieces on narrow looms and edge-sewn together, these may have geometric patterns. The term ‘jajim’ also refers to the assembled warp-faced strip and stripe covers from the Shah Savan of northwest Persia, the pattern is defined by warps alone, usually in plain stripes, but sometimes in designs of ladders, snakes, human figures and various animals. Here the color changing warps are continuous. Most are wool, a few are silk. Better to call these something else. Indian ‘Dhurries’ are all cotton kilims and ‘shatrangis’ employ wool wefts on cotton warps. Dhurries are slitless. The cotton texture is more appropriate to the humid and warm climate of the Indian subcontinent. Modern Dhurries...
Category

Mid-20th Century Turkish Modern Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Schumacher Yoruba Area Rug in Hand-Woven Wool & Silk by Patterson Flynn Martin
By Schumacher
Located in New York, NY
Explore the exotic with our Tribal Chic collection. Teeming with texture – from hardy abaca to plush Moroccan wool – the earthy tones of these graphic designs add warmth and characte...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Nepalese Modern Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool, Silk

Early 20th Century Handmade Persian Pictorial Tabriz Large Room Size Carpet
Located in New York, NY
An antique Persian Tabriz large room size carpet handmade during the early 20th century. Floral sprouts decorate the field along with an arabesque pattern shaping a quatrefoil and sp...
Category

Early 20th Century Persian Victorian Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Turkish Flat-Weave Kilim Small Room Size Carpet in Red Orange
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Turkish flat-weave Kilim small room size carpet handmade during the mid-20th century in shades of red orange. Measures: 7' 10" x 11' 0" Knotted pile rugs are just one...
Category

Mid-20th Century Turkish Modern Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Chinese Art Deco Throw Rug
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Chinese Art Deco throw rug handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 2' 8" x 3' 9" The Craft of the hand-knotted carpet in China, and the surrounding areas including Mongolia and Tibet, extends into the early centuries of the first millennium, C.E., but we really have a firm grasp only beginning in the later 16th century with large, very coarsely woven carpets, often depicting dragons, created for the Imperial Forbidden City palaces. Chinese carpets have always been commercial and there are no tribal groups responsible for any of the carpet weaving strains. When the Ming Dynasty fell in 1644, with no Imperial patrons, production moved to the city of Ningxia in north central China where several workshops turned out more finely woven pieces for the Mandarins of the administrative Ch’ing bureaucracy and well-to-do merchants. Ningxia was the major Chinese carpet center up through most of the 19th century, with first allover and then medallion designs on cotton foundations in medium weaves. Palettes were initially limited to yellows, dark blue and cream, but later widened to include reds, browns and even green. These antiques were the first Chinese carpets to be exported to the West and they fitted in well with the craze for Chinese blue-and-white porcelain in the second half of the 19th century. Ningxia also wove shaped and rectangular small rugs for saddle underlays, chair (“throne”) seats and shaped backs, pillar carpets with dragons or monks for Buddhist monasteries, and long divided runners for monastery meditation halls. These small rugs are among the most collectible of all Chinese weavings. Weavers from Ningxia set up workshops in the capital Peking (Beijing) in the 1860’s and began weaving Western room sizes for export, primarily to America. In blue – and – white and polychrome palettes, with round wreath medallions, precious objects, seasonal flowers, paeonies, lotuses, fretwork, clouds, butterflies and bats, all relatively spaciously drawn. The round “Shou” (Good Luck) character is also a prominent decorative motif. There are also a few Peking landscape pictorials with pagodas, houses, bridges, waterscapes and boats. Peking carpets were woven right up until WWII and production began again after the Cultural Revolution around 1970. They are moderately well-woven, on cotton foundations, exactingly executed and indisputably Chinese. Many are in the blue-and-white style. Nothing else looks like a Peking carpet and for a Chinese “look” in a room, they are absolutely indispensable. Sizes range from scatters and a few runners, through the popular 9’12’ size, to large carpets over 20’ which must have been special orders. The earliest Peking Revival carpets are pliable and fairly thin, but they became heavier and more compact in the 20th century, in competition with Art Deco carpets from Tientsin. The modern, post- 1970, pieces are in the traditional Peking style, but are a little too regular and neat. Exactitude has been favored over character, as hard to explain that as it is. There are a number of all-silk and silk-and –metal thread pieces, many with inscriptions purporting to link them with rooms in the Imperial palaces, bringing very substantial auction prices, but none are really antique. The genre emerged after WWI and the present demand comes from mainland Chinese. The silk piles often Stand in pattern relief against flat woven gold metal thread grounds. The inscriptions are apocryphal, the rugs are flashily opulent, perfect for nouveaux riches. The Art Deco period between the two World Wars saw a distinctive carpet industry developing in Tientsin (Tianjin) in northeastern China. These are highly prized for their transitional design character, neither overtly Chinese, nor abstractly modern/contemporary. Woven exclusively for export, usually by and for American firms, such as Nichols and Elbrook, they are totally in the “Jazz Age Modern” style of the 1920’s, often without borders, with abstract or abstracted patterns, and only with, at best, a few Chinese-y pattern elements. Vases asymmetrically placed in the corners are features of some of the more Chinese-y carpets. Open fields with floral sprays and branches growing in from the edges are anther design innovation. Often, Chinese motives have been re-imagined in more sharp-edged, abstract manners. Some have no references whatsoever to natural elements. The patterns are sharp and the rugs are never subdued, soft or restrained. The rugs are heavily constructed, with crisp, unfading dyes and medium to medium coarse weaves on cotton foundations. All are extremely well-executed, with none of the vagaries, variations or twists found on even high-quality Persian rugs. The majority are in the 9’ by 12’ format and a surprising number can be found in top condition. There also was a substantial production in Peking from, especially from the Fette factory. Elliptical and round carpets, and lighter, often pastel colors, were a specialty. Nothing looks like an Art Deco Chinese and they work well with traditional Chinese furniture and the most modern decor as well. These is no substitute for a good Chinese Art Deco carpet. Chinese carpets also include small scatters from Tibet, with high quality wool, floating dragons and allover textile patterns. The colors of vintage and modern pieces are bright, but there are antique small rugs...
Category

Mid-20th Century Chinese Art Deco Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Persian Pictorial Flatweave Kilim Throw Rug
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Persian pictorial flatweave Kilim throw rug handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 3' 6" x 4' 6".
Category

Mid-20th Century Persian Folk Art Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Moroccan Inspired Contemporary Handmade Turkish Large Room Size Carpet
Located in New York, NY
A modern Turkish large room size carpet handmade during the 21st century inspired by Moroccan rugs of the mid-20th century period. Measures: 14' 2" x 18' 8".
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Turkish Tribal Manhattan - More Carpets

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: 3' 4" x 6' 7".
Category

Mid-20th Century Turkish Modern Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Early 20th Century Handmade Persian Mahal Rustic Accent Rug
Located in New York, NY
An antique Persian Mahal rustic accent rug handmade during the early 20th century. Measures: 7' 0" x 8' 4".
Category

Early 20th Century Persian Rustic Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Persian Malayer Accent Rug
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Persian Malayer accent rug handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 4' 4" x 6' 8"
Category

Mid-20th Century Persian Rustic Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Schumacher Zebre 8' x 10' Hand-Knotted Rug In Ivory/ Black
By Schumacher
Located in New York, NY
This rug will ship in December. A wildly chic hand-knotted design made of wool and cotton, Zebre features a large-scale abstract animal pattern. Inspired by our popular Ze’bre Epingl...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Cotton

Vintage Persian Malayer Rug
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Persian Malayer rug from the mid-20th century. Measures: 5' 3" x 10' 4"
Category

Mid-20th Century Persian Malayer Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Persian Tabriz Large Room Size Carpet in Yellow
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Persian Tabriz large room size carpet handmade during the mid-20th century with a large geometric stepped lattice filled in with a double pendant stepped lattice. The entir...
Category

Mid-20th Century Persian Colonial Revival Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Persian Hamadan Runner Rug in Bright Vivid Colors
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Persian Hamadan rug in runner format handmade during the mid-20th century with the traditional Persian 'Herati' pattern over a red field. The overall aesthetic is quite bri...
Category

Mid-20th Century Persian Rustic Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Tea Green Persian Tribal Runner 3 x 13 Wool 20th Century Runner
Located in New York, NY
Early 20th century Persian Serab runner with a light tea green field, accents in light blue and red too. Not so busy, colors are slick and clean throughout. Tribal motif, good overal...
Category

Early 20th Century Persian Tribal Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Antique Persian Tree of Life Design Rashti Embroidery Textile 4'4" x 5'
Located in New York, NY
A Truly Captivating Antique Persian Tree of Life Design Rashti Embroidery Textile, Country Of Origin: Persia, Circa date: 1850
Category

Mid-19th Century Persian Other Antique Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Silk, Wool

Antique Persian Lilihan Rug
Located in New York, NY
Formal medium pile condition persian Lilihan rug from the 1st quarter of the 20th century Measures: 6'9'' x 9'6''.
Category

Early 20th Century Persian Malayer Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Contemporary Navajo Rug (9' x 12' - 274 x 365 )
Located in New York, NY
Navajo 9'0" x 12'0" Four Corners
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Indian Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Antique Turkish Ghiordes Rug. 15 ft 6 in x 18 ft 7 in
Located in New York, NY
Large Antique Turkish Ghiordes Rug, Country Of Origin: Turkey, Circa date: 1820. Size: 15 ft 6 in x 18 ft 7 in (4.72 m x 5.66 m)
Category

19th Century Turkish Oushak Antique Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Persian Flat-Weave Tribal Kilim Room Size Accent Rug
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Persian flat-weave tribal Kilim room size accent rug handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 6' 1" x 9' 7".
Category

Mid-20th Century Persian Tribal Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Persian Flat-Weave Tribal Kilim Room Size Accent Rug
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Persian flat-weave tribal Kilim room size accent rug handmade during the mid-20th century with a zebra print design in ivory and black with red bindings. Measures: 6' 5"...
Category

Mid-20th Century Persian Tribal Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Russian Bessarabian Pictorial Tiger Accent Rug
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Russian Bessarabian flat-weave accent rug handmade during the mid-20th century with a pictorial depiction of 2 tigers in a forest setting. Measures: 6' 7" x 9' 9".
Category

Mid-20th Century Russian Neoclassical Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Persian Afshar Throw Rug
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Persian Afshar throw rug handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 3' 8" x 4' 10".
Category

Mid-20th Century Persian Tribal Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Contemporary Turkish Room Size Carpet in Black, White, & Beige
Located in New York, NY
A modern Turkish room size carpet with a diagonally hooked pattern in black and white over a beige ground handmade during the 21st century. Measures: 8' 6" x 12' 2".
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Turkish Modern Manhattan - More Carpets

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: 3' 6" x 4' 11" 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 Rustic Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

Vintage Turkish Deer Pictorial Rug
Located in New York, NY
Mid-20th Century Turkish rug depicting 2 deers on a brown field. Check the border out too! Measures: 1'9'' x 2'9''.
Category

Mid-20th Century Adirondack Manhattan - More Carpets

Materials

Wool

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