The Muskebad design tradition is known for its bold, large-scale floral compositions, and this machine-made New Zealand wool rug successfully captures that essence in a rich midnight blue and burnt orange color palette. The deep blue field is fully covered with oversized floral motifs, scrolling vines, and botanical elements in gold, ivory, and green, creating a dense and visually impactful design. The dark background enhances the warmth of the orange and gold tones, adding depth and vibrancy to the overall composition. A wide red border continues the floral theme, ensuring consistency across the entire rug. The dense pile construction provides both durability and softness, making it suitable for everyday use in high-traffic areas such as living rooms or family spaces. This rug aligns well with current U.S. interior design trends that favor bold statement pieces with strong color contrast and traditional Persian-inspired patterns. It offers an excellent combination of visual richness, comfort, and affordability within the modern rug market.
- Exact Size: 4'6"x6'7"
- Weave: Machine Made Rug
- Yarn: New Zealand Wool
- Color: Midnight Blue, Burnt Orange, Ivory, Gold, Blue, Green, Multi
- Origin: Belgium
- Pile Height: 0.5 inch
- Condition: New
- Condition Description: New With Tags
- Rug#: LBR21110
Story Behind the Art: Persian rug weaving is one of the oldest and most continuous craft traditions in the world, with documented history stretching back over two and a half thousand years across the territory that is modern day Iran. The art developed across distinct regional centers, each producing rugs with their own design vocabulary, knotting techniques and color traditions rooted in the local culture, climate and available materials. Cities like Kashan, Isfahan, Tabriz and Kerman became renowned for their court-level production, where master weavers worked from detailed cartoons drawn by professional designers, achieving knot counts and levels of decorative refinement that represented the highest expression of the craft. Tribal and village traditions running parallel to the city workshops produced a different but equally valued body of work, where geometric, symbolic and totemic designs were passed down through generations of weavers working from memory rather than pattern. The materials, the natural dyes, the wool quality and the construction methods all varied by region, and it is that diversity across a single geographic and cultural tradition that gives Persian rug making its depth and enduring relevance.