





An unusually dark Herat Turkmen carpet β its near-black field and luminous ivory medallion a study in deliberate contrast β with vivid elem bands that mark its Central Asian origins unmistakably.
Most Herat Turkmen carpets announce themselves in warm reds and ambers. This one does not. The field is a deep, near-black navy β a deliberate departure that gives this piece a nocturnal gravity unusual in Afghan workshop production β and against it, the large ivory medallion reads not as decoration but as illumination: light held in wool. The Turkmen craftspeople of Herat, descendants of tribes who migrated from Soviet Central Asia in the 1930s, brought with them a design vocabulary encoded over generations, and the elem bands at head and foot β worked in bold horizontal stripes of red, ivory, and orange β are a persistent mark of that heritage, unchanged across continents and decades. Knotted entirely in wool at approximately 110 knots per square inch. The designation Surplus refers to pieces produced beyond commission; the standard is without distinction from bespoke work.
A hand-knotted & woven rug is an investment piece. With proper care it will last a lifetime and become a cherished heirloom. Each knot in this collection is tied by hand by nomadic tribesmen, making every piece entirely one of a kind.
Variations in colour and tone β known as abrash β are a hallmark of authentic handmade rugs, particularly tribal and vintage pieces. Wear and age only add to their beauty.
| Origin | Herat, Afghanistan |
| Tribe | Turkmen |
| Technique | Hand-knotted |
| Construction | Approx. 110 knots per square inch |
| Material | Wool |
| One of a kind | Yes |







