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Boujaad — handwoven Berber rug

Boujaad Rugs

Boujaad is the rug a Beni Ourain looks at when it wants to grow up. Same Berber loom, same hand-knotted wool, same century-deep tradition — but where Beni Ourain stays restrained on a cream field, Boujaad goes the other way. The palette is warm: madder reds drawn from Rubia tinctorum root grown in the trans-Saharan trade corridors, henna oranges, walnut-hull browns, occasional flashes of indigo blue. The motifs are asymmetric — diamonds that lean, lozenges that overlap, the kind of geometry a weaver draws by eye rather than to grid. These rugs are made by Berber weavers in the Tadla plain around the town of Boujâd (Khouribga Province), and they were consolidated as a recognisable tradition by about 1750 — which makes them, by rug-history standards, relatively young. They are the rug for rooms with leather chairs, warm wood floors, and a willingness to commit to colour.

What makes a Boujaad warm-toned

Madder is the central dye. The root of Rubia tinctorum has been cultivated and traded across the Mediterranean for at least two thousand years; it reached Atlas weavers via trans-Saharan trade by the sixteenth century and stayed. Madder with alum mordant produces a clear bright red. Madder with iron darkens to a blood-burgundy. Madder with copper shifts purple. A single Boujaad rug typically uses two or three of these variations, which is why the reds in a Boujaad never look uniform — they vary across the rug in the specific way only naturally-dyed wool varies.

Henna gives the oranges. Walnut hull gives the browns. Pomegranate skin gives some of the yellow accents. These are all plant dyes, all traditional, all stable across decades. The Boujaad palette doesn't fade uniformly the way synthetic-dye rugs fade — it mellows into specific patinas. Vintage Boujaad from the 1960s and 70s has the kind of colour depth you cannot manufacture; it has to be earned by decades of living with the rug.

The motifs are folk-art, not geometry

Boujaad weavers don't sketch the rug in advance. They start at the bottom edge of the warp and work upward, improvising the motif placement as the weaving grows. This is why no two Boujaad rugs are quite the same and why the diamonds you find on them have personality rather than precision. One weaver's diamond will be tall and narrow; her neighbour's will be squat and wide; her mother's will be asymmetric in a way that reads as deliberate but isn't.

The vocabulary is the same broad Berber symbol set that shows up across Atlas weaving — diamonds for female fertility and protection, zigzags for water, eye motifs for protection from al-'ayn. Swiss textile historian Bruno Barbatti, whose 1996 reference decoded the Berber symbol vocabulary across tribes, treats Boujaad as a specifically expressive interpretation of the shared Berber language — same words, different handwriting.

Where Boujaad belongs in a house

Boujaad earns its keep in rooms that want a centre. A 9×12 under a cognac-leather Chesterfield in a living room with cream walls and walnut floors is the textbook placement — the rug warms the room without competing for attention, and the leather and walnut pick up the rug's red-brown register. Libraries work. Studies work. Bedrooms in houses with darker palettes work. Dining rooms with wood tables in warm finishes work, though we usually recommend a flat-weave Hanbel under a dining table because chairs slide more smoothly.

Where Boujaad doesn't work: modernist white-box interiors. Cool minimalist rooms. Anything Scandinavian or Japandi. The rug fights back against cool palettes. If your room is already committed to neutral, save the Boujaad for the next house. If your room can carry warmth — terracotta accents, dark wood, leather, patina — Boujaad will anchor it for the rest of your life.

Why ours is the Boujaad you want

We source Boujaad through two channels. New commission work from Tadla co-operatives — controllable in dimension, shippable in eight to fourteen weeks, with documented weaver attribution where the co-operative tracks it. And documented vintage from 1960s through 90s production — each piece with the patina that only decades of use produce, sourced from specific Moroccan dealer relationships we've built over time. We do not sell anonymous-source Boujaad. We do not sell pieces we haven't either commissioned ourselves or traced back to a household.

Tell us what you're working with — the room, the existing furniture, the approximate size — and we'll show you what we have or what we can build for you. A Boujaad is not a passing decoration. It's a thirty-year decision. Treat the conversation that way.

Was Sie über uns überprüfen können

Direkte Beschaffung
Atlas-KooperativenKeine Zwischenhändler zwischen Weber und Ihnen.
Konstruktion
Handgeknüpfte WolleIn jeder Phase geprüft — nie maschinell getuftet.
Herkunft
Pro Stück dokumentiertDorf, Webperiode und, wo vorhanden, der Name des Webers.
Rückgabe
14 TageIm Lieferzustand, volle Erstattung des Kaufpreises.

Häufig gefragt

Fragen

What is a Boujaad rug?
A hand-knotted Berber wool rug from the Tadla plain around the town of Boujâd in Khouribga Province, central Morocco. Warm palette dominated by madder red, henna orange, and walnut brown. Asymmetric diamond and lozenge motifs drawn by hand.
How is Boujaad different from Beni Ourain?
Different region (Tadla plain vs Middle Atlas), different palette (warm reds and browns vs cream and dark), different compositional approach (improvisational and asymmetric vs more restrained and symmetric). Same Berber weaving technique and same family of symbolic motifs.
Is the red in Boujaad natural?
In traditional and vintage Boujaad, yes — the red is madder, from Rubia tinctorum root, mordanted with alum (clear red), iron (dark burgundy), or copper (purple-red). The variation in tone across a single Boujaad comes from these mordant differences. Some mass-market contemporary production uses synthetic alizarin red for cost reasons; ours is traditional madder.
How old is the Boujaad tradition?
The Boujaad style consolidated as a recognisable tradition around 1750 CE. Berber weaving in the broader Tadla region predates this by centuries; the specific Boujaad palette and motif vocabulary are an early-modern expression of an older craft.
Where does a Boujaad work in a house?
Living rooms with warm-toned furniture (leather, walnut, terracotta accents). Libraries and studies. Bedrooms in warm-palette houses. Dining rooms with wood-toned tables, though we usually recommend a flat-weave Hanbel under dining tables. Cool modernist or Scandinavian rooms are typically wrong for Boujaad.
How long does a Boujaad last?
Three to five decades with normal care; longer with deliberate care. The wool is dense, the knotting is sound, and the natural dyes mellow rather than fade. Vintage Boujaad from the 1960s and 70s is still in active household use today; that should tell you what to expect from a new piece.
What does a real Boujaad cost?
There is a real floor on what a hand-knotted Boujaad can cost — eleven weeks of weaver labour on a 9×12 plus the pre-weaving stages plus natural dye work plus finishing. Anything significantly under €500 for a 9×12 is either machine-made (with the Boujaad pattern printed onto tufted production) or being made under labour conditions no Western buyer would knowingly sign off on. We price ours at the labour-honest level and don't run sales.

Sources & References

What this page rests on

  1. 1. Bruno Barbatti — textile historianTapis du Maroc — Le langage des symboles (1996) Scheidegger & SpiessThe reference work on the symbolic vocabulary of Berber rug motifs.
  2. 2. Hiba Swadi, Nagham Swadi & Meena M. Abdul-HussainUsing Walnut Peel as a Natural Dye with Natural Wool FibersResearch on walnut-hull dyeing of wool — the dominant dark brown source in Atlas weaving.
  3. 3. Cynthia Becker — Boston UniversityAmazigh Arts in Morocco: Women Shaping Berber Identity (2006) University of Texas PressAnthropological study of Atlas weaving as Amazigh women's craft tradition.
  4. 4. WikidataBoujaad (Q24875571)
Youssef, Gründer von ARINID

Der Mensch hinter dem Stück

„Vor dem Kauf schicke ich Ihnen ein Video des echten Teppichs bei Tageslicht — kein Katalogfoto. Ihre Nachrichten beantworte ich selbst.“

Ich bin Youssef. Ich habe ARINID gegründet, weil dieser Markt voller Zwischenhändler und maschinell gefertigter Imitationen ist, die als echt verkauft werden — und ich bin nah genug an den Webstühlen aufgewachsen, um den Unterschied zu kennen.

Jedes Stück, das wir führen, lässt sich bis zur Kooperative zurückverfolgen, die es gewebt hat. Wenn Sie die Größe für Ihren Raum besprechen möchten, bin ich am anderen Ende der Nachricht. Ein Teppich auf diesem Niveau ist eine Entscheidung für dreißig Jahre. Sie sollten dem Verkäufer in die Augen sehen können.

Youssef

Gründer, ARINID

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Der nächste Schritt

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