Red madder field. Rows of arrows. Six weeks of memory.
Six weeks of work. The hands of Amazigh women. One loom. One rug — never to be repeated.
Handwoven by Amazigh women artisans in Taznakht, Morocco, this red Moroccan rug measures 193 × 107 cm and is built from 100% natural wool. Its construction combines a flat-woven kilim ground dyed deep madder red with individual symbols built up as raised knotted pile islands sitting proud of the flat surface — each motif three-dimensional and tactile against the smooth field. The layout here is more structured than pure scatter: rows of chevron arrows, stacked diamond medallions, cross forms, triangular arrowheads, and bracketed geometric shapes move down the field in loose horizontal registers, each row in its own colour combination. A knotted pile border of stacked colour blocks — navy, orange, olive, cream, black — frames all four sides. The red comes from madder root; the full palette of navy, ivory, burnt orange, olive, and black from plant pigments layered by hand. Woven over six weeks, it is the only one of its kind in the world.
Meaning & Symbolism
Red is the most charged colour in Amazigh textile tradition. Dyed from madder root — a plant whose roots take months to mature before the dye is ready — red represents life, vitality, and the protection of the home. A red ground in a Moroccan runner is not decorative choice; it is a statement about what the rug is for. Every step taken across it is taken across a field of warmth and protection.
The rows of chevron arrows moving down the field carry the meaning of direction and forward movement — life continuing its course, energy pointed toward good. The diamond medallions anchored in the centre rows carry family protection, a boundary drawn around what matters. Cross and hash forms — four arms extending in four directions — guard the field from all sides at once. The stacked colour-block border that frames all four sides names what the rug contains: navy for protection, orange for warmth and energy, olive for growth, cream for clarity and honesty.
The result is not only decoration, but a handmade object shaped by patience, memory, and daily use.
The Symbols on This Rug
Each symbol was placed from memory, moving down the field in loose registers — each row its own motif, its own colour, its own quiet meaning.
Color from the Earth
Every colour in this runner comes from plant pigment or natural fleece. The deep red ground is dyed from madder root — a slow dye: the roots take months to grow before the pigment is ready, and the wool must be mordanted and soaked before the colour holds. Nothing here is quick.
The burnt orange and olive green are made by layering and over-dyeing the base pigments — orange from yellow and red combined, olive from yellow and indigo.
The ivory and black tones in the symbol motifs are not dyed — they come from natural light-fleeced and dark-fleeced sheep respectively.
Perfect Spaces
At 76 × 42 in (193 × 107 cm), this rug brings handmade warmth and a full vocabulary of Moroccan symbol to living spaces, bedrooms, and hallways alike.
A bold, grounding centrepiece that anchors a seating area with vivid red and a full register of Amazigh symbol and colour.
Natural wool and warm plant-dyed colour bring energy and handmade character to the floor without overwhelming the room.
A durable handmade accent that brings Moroccan rhythm and madder-red warmth to a passage, with every motif a reason to look again.
A welcoming first layer that introduces the home with full Moroccan character — bold red ground, symbol rows, and natural wool underfoot.
A tactile, colourful layer that makes a quiet corner feel warmer and more personal — the scattered motifs always offer something new to notice.
May your home be filled with warmth, joy, and color. May every step on this rug bring happiness, harmony, and good fortune. — The Artisan's Blessing
in the world
the loom
pile & flatweave
plant-dyed