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SKU #: KR21066
Arts & Crafts
Hand Knotted
Primary color is Beige. Colors in this rug include: Rust, Sage, Gray, Gold, Charcoal, Multi .
100% Wool
0.5
Oushak
India
New
New With Tags
Oushak-inspired patterns translate beautifully into the Arts & Crafts style, and this hand knotted wool rug from India blends both design traditions into an open, relaxed composition on a warm ivory ground. Large-scale scrolling vines and stylized floral forms in rust, sage, gray, and gold move across the field while the ivory background remains visible throughout, giving this oriental area rug its spacious, airy character. A charcoal floral element anchors the center of the design, while the rust main border expands the same bold botanical scrollwork around the perimeter, finished with narrow ivory guard stripes on both sides for a clean traditional frame. Woven in 100% wool on a cotton foundation with a medium pile, the rug offers a soft texture, durable construction, and a muted earthy palette that brings warmth and balance to a variety of interiors. Its combination of Oushak design, Arts & Crafts influence, and handmade quality makes it well suited as a living room rug, dining room rug, bedroom rug, or timeless luxury home décor accent.
Story Behind the Art: Hand-knotted rugs are among the most enduring forms of artisan craftsmanship, with origins in the nomadic cultures of Persia and Central Asia thousands of years ago, when one carefully knotted textile could provide warmth, protection, status, and a sense of identity. Their creation depends on individual knots tied by hand around warp threads, an ancient construction method that has remained remarkably consistent through time. The same fundamental gesture used by a weaver in a Jaipur workshop today can be traced back to the refined handwork of a 16th-century Safavid atelier. While modern production often favors speed and repetition, a true hand knotted rug still asks for months, and sometimes years, of continuous human focus. Contemporary buyers and designers are rediscovering these handmade rugs not simply as historic floor coverings, but as collectible works of art, commissioning abstract, minimalist, and conceptual patterns from skilled weavers in Iran, Afghanistan, India, and Nepal.










