Green and orange. Three constructions. Hundreds of symbols. Eight weeks.
Eight weeks of work. The hands of Amazigh women. One loom. One rug — never to be repeated.
Woven across eight weeks, this green and orange Moroccan rug is the most technically ambitious piece in the TazRugs collection. It works in three distinct constructions simultaneously: hand-knotted olive green fields scattered with dozens of small Amazigh symbols; hand-knotted orange columns running down the centre, each carrying their own separate scatter of marks; and flat-woven black-and-white herringbone insets embedded within the green field like windows into a different weave. Made in Taznakht, Morocco, in the Anti-Atlas foothills, by Amazigh women artisans, it is 100% natural wool, naturally coloured. Along both sides, black wool tufts punctuate the edge at intervals. At 93 × 65 in (236 × 165 cm), it is a large, dense, and singular piece. It is the only one of its kind in the world.
Meaning & Symbolism
This rug carries more symbols than any other in the collection — dozens of small Amazigh marks scattered freely across the green and orange fields, each one placed by the artisan's hand without a fixed plan. X forms and crosses bless in every direction. Arrow and chevron marks point forward — movement, direction, the will to go somewhere. H and linear character forms draw from the Tifinagh script, the ancient alphabet of the Amazigh people, woven into the textile as an act of cultural memory. Star and rosette forms scatter light and good fortune. Small diamonds repeat the protection mark at the micro scale.
The two columns of orange that run the length of the rug are not borders — they are a second field. In Amazigh colour language, warm orange and amber carry welcome, warmth, and the energy of something alive. The deep olive green holds the land — the colour of the Taznakht valley, the colour of something that endures. Together they create a strong, warm contrast that does not resolve into a single focal point but spreads the energy across the whole surface.
The black-and-white herringbone insets are the most technically unusual element — flat-woven diamonds embedded within the knotted pile, each one a different texture, a different way of holding the same space. The result is not only decoration, but a handmade object shaped by patience, memory, and daily use.
The Symbols on This Rug
Dozens of Amazigh symbols are scattered across this rug's surface — four of the most recurring are shown here, each drawn from the living weaving tradition of Taznakht.
Color from the Earth
Every colour in this rug comes from one of two sources: a plant-based pigment prepared without harsh chemical process, or the natural colour of the wool itself, straight from the sheep. Nothing is bought as a ready-made synthetic colour.
The dusty pink, warm amber, and deep brown tones in the scattered symbol marks are not separate dyes — they are made by adjusting dip times, layering pigments, or blending dyed and undyed fleece before spinning.
The cream, natural white, and black tones are not dyed at all — they come from the natural colour of different fleeces.
Perfect Spaces
At 93 × 65 in (236 × 165 cm), this is a large, visually rich rug — it works best in rooms with breathing space, where the full composition can be seen from a distance.
A bold, warm centrepiece — the green-and-orange composition anchors a seating area with real visual authority; the dozens of small symbols reward every closer look.
The warm olive and orange palette brings the bedroom to life without forcing it — the dense symbol scatter gives the room something to discover each morning.
A tactile, deeply detailed layer — the Tifinagh marks, herringbone insets, and scattered symbols make this rug one of the most rewarding to sit close to in the entire collection.
Natural wool and an endlessly detailed surface soften a focused work area — the green ground is grounding and calm; the orange columns bring warmth and energy.
Hung vertically, this becomes a woven encyclopaedia of Amazigh marks — the side tufts, three-construction surface, and full palette read as cultural textile art at its most ambitious.
May this rug bring life, joy, and warmth to every corner of your home. — The Artisan's Blessing
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