Moroccan Rug 10×14 — Great-Room and Open-Plan Scale
Ten by fourteen — 305 by 427 centimetres — is great-room territory. It is the size you order when a 9×12 visually drowns inside the architecture: 20-foot vaulted ceilings, open-plan kitchen-dining-living combinations of 500+ square feet, primary bedroom suites with sitting areas. It is also a size that no longer ships as a single courier parcel — at 10×14 you are committing to a roll-and-crate ocean freight, three to five weeks transit, and a customs broker. The trade-off is that 10×14 is the dimension where a hand-knotted Beni Ourain begins to feel like an architectural element rather than a furnishing — which is the point.
When 10×14 Actually Belongs in a Room
Three architectural conditions justify 10×14. First: ceiling height over 12 feet, where a smaller rug would visually 'shrink' under the volume above it. Second: a single open volume larger than 400 square feet, where 9×12 leaves too much bare floor to read as anchoring. Third: a primary bedroom with a king bed plus full sitting area (chairs, ottoman, side table) — the rug must span all of it.
If none of those conditions apply, 10×14 will dominate the room rather than anchor it. Designers who specify 10×14 in a 12×16-foot living room are usually trying to make the room feel larger by removing the visible floor border. It rarely works.
What 10×14 Takes to Weave
At 80 KPSI a 10×14 contains approximately 161,300 hand-tied knots. At 130 KPSI (Beni Mrirt density), approximately 262,100. The weaver-day math: 18 to 22 weeks of pure weaving for one weaver on a standard Beni Ourain at this scale, before wool preparation, setup, and finishing. Most co-operatives put two or three weavers on a 10×14 loom side by side to compress the timeline to 8–10 weeks.
Wool use: 18 to 25 kilograms finished. Loom width: a 10×14 requires a loom of at least 10.5 feet in the warp direction — many small co-operatives don't own a loom this large. The supply of true hand-knotted Moroccan rugs at this dimension is genuinely limited.
Shipping and Logistics Reality
A 10×14 wool rug weighs roughly 40 to 55 kilograms. Rolled, it forms a parcel of about 1.4m × 30cm × 30cm. This exceeds DHL Express dimensional weight thresholds, which means either expensive ($600–$600) air freight in a wooden crate, or sea freight at $200–$400 with a 4–6 week transit and a customs broker at the destination. Most serious 10×14 transactions go sea freight. Pricing should be clear on which freight method is included.
Honest Cost Anatomy
An 80-KPSI 10×14 Beni Ourain at the co-operative level: $4,500 to $7,200, depending on wool grade. High-density Beni Mrirt at the same dimension: $11,000 to $22,000. Add 25% for direct workshop retail. Western galleries can carry 10×14 hand-knotted Beni Ourains at $18,000 to $35,000, which reflects rent, sales commission, and import overhead more than weaving labour.
Beware: many 10×14 rugs sold under 'Moroccan' branding at $2,000–$4,000 are machine-woven New Zealand or Indian production with Moroccan-style patterns. Authentic hand-knotted Atlas-woven 10×14 rugs do not exist below roughly $4,000 from any honest source — the labour math simply doesn't allow it.
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
- How much does a real 10×14 Beni Ourain cost?
- $4,500–$7,200 direct from an Atlas co-operative for a standard 80-KPSI piece. $11,000–$22,000 for high-density Beni Mrirt at the same dimension. Western boutique retail typically 2–3× co-operative pricing.
- How long does a 10×14 take to weave?
- 18–22 weeks for one weaver at standard Beni Ourain density. With two or three weavers on the same loom, 8–10 weeks. Plus 2–4 weeks for wool preparation, spinning, and finishing.
- Can a 10×14 ship by air courier?
- Generally no. At 40–55 kg and 1.4m roll length, it exceeds standard DHL/FedEx Express dimensional weight limits. Most 10×14 transactions ship as sea freight (4–6 weeks) or palletised crated air cargo ($600–$600).
- Is 10×14 too big for a normal living room?
- Yes for a standard 12×16-ft living room — it will crowd the walls and make the space feel smaller. 10×14 is for open-plan great rooms 18 ft+ in either direction, or rooms with 12-ft+ ceilings.
- Can I get a custom 10×14 made to spec?
- Yes — most Atlas co-operatives accept custom commissions at this scale. Lead time runs 12 to 20 weeks from order to ready-to-ship. Custom colour fields, motif placement, and exact dimensions are all negotiable.
- How heavy is a 10×14 Moroccan rug?
- 40 to 55 kilograms (88 to 121 lbs) for genuine hand-knotted wool. Significantly less for machine-made or synthetic. Notably more for tufted with latex backing.
Sources & References
What this page rests on
- 1. Atlas Cooperative Production Records
- 2. MASA Sea Freight Morocco

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
Der nächste Schritt
Sehen Sie jeden Moroccan Rug 10x14, den wir derzeit anbieten
Jedes Stück wird im Atlasgebirge von Hand geknüpft und direkt zu Ihnen geliefert — mit dokumentierter Herkunft und Weber.