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Story Behind the Art : Southwestern rug design originates from the long-standing textile traditions of Native American tribes in the American Southwest—most prominently the Navajo (Diné), Pueblo, and Hopi peoples whose weaving practices span centuries. Early Southwestern rugs were crafted using hand-spun wool and dyed with natural pigments made from plants, minerals, and insect sources, resulting in rich, organic color stories rooted in the region’s desert landscapes. The style relies heavily on geometric patterning: repeating diamonds, stepped shapes, zigzags, crosses, and linear forms are foundational elements arranged with symmetry and rhythmic repetition. Classic palette choices include clay red, sand beige, charcoal black, ivory, indigo, and muted blues—tones that reflect earth, sky, stone, and soil. Modern interpretations soften these hues into washed grays, pale blues, and neutral shades, allowing Southwestern weaving traditions to blend seamlessly into today’s popular rustic-modern, boho-desert, and Southwest-inspired home décor trends across the U.S.

