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Moroccan Runner Rug — Hand-Knotted Long Wool Runners

A runner is any rug significantly longer than it is wide — the standard ratio sits between 1:3 and 1:5. Moroccan runners are made on the same Atlas looms that produce rectangular rugs, simply with a long warp and a narrow width. Typical dimensions: 2×6 ft (60×183 cm), 2.5×8 ft (76×244 cm), 2.5×10 ft (76×305 cm), 3×12 ft (91×366 cm), and custom lengths to 16 feet for grand hallway installations. They serve a different function than rectangular rugs — they direct movement through a space rather than anchor it.

Where Runners Belong

Hallways are the canonical runner placement. A long corridor needs visual extension and underfoot softness, but a rectangular rug would interrupt the linear flow. A runner — typically 2.5 to 3 feet wide, running the length of the hall minus 6 to 12 inches from each end — looks intentional rather than improvised. Beni Ourain runners in undyed cream wool work particularly well in dark-floor hallways; Azilal or Boujaad runners add colour interruptions.

Kitchens use runners along the working aisle — the stretch of floor between counter and island, or counter and stove. A wool runner withstands kitchen traffic significantly better than typical cotton or synthetic kitchen rugs; spills can be blotted without staining if attended to within minutes.

Bedside runners — one on each side of a queen or king bed — are a refined alternative to a single large rug under the bed. Each runner typically 2.5×6 ft, placed parallel to the bed, providing soft landing for feet without committing the entire room to a single rug.

How to Size a Hallway Runner

The standard rule: leave 6 to 12 inches of bare floor between the runner's short edges and the hallway walls or doors at either end. This visual border prevents the runner from looking awkwardly truncated or visually pressed against the architecture. For a hallway of 10 feet, a 2.5×8 or 3×8 runner is ideal. For a 14-foot hall, 2.5×12 or 3×12.

Width: the runner should occupy roughly two-thirds of the hallway width, leaving equal floor borders on each long side. A 4-foot-wide hallway calls for a roughly 2.5-foot runner; a 5-foot hallway, a 3-foot runner. Wider runners up to 4 feet exist but become too wide for typical residential hallways.

Weaving Time and Cost

A 2.5×8 Beni Ourain runner at 80 KPSI contains approximately 23,000 hand-tied knots — about three weeks of weaving for one weaver. A 3×12 runner: approximately 41,500 knots, four to five weeks. Co-operative cost for a 2.5×8 runner: $900–$1,400. For 3×12: $1,500–$2,400.

Higher-density Beni Mrirt runners cost roughly 1.6 to 1.8× more for the same dimension. Vintage Moroccan runners from estate sales can command significant premiums but tend to come in irregular dimensions — a 2.4×7.8 rather than a clean 2.5×8 — which limits where they fit.

Authenticity at Runner Scale

Hand-knotted runners show the same back-of-rug signatures as their rectangular counterparts: individual visible knots, weft lines, fringe continuous with the warp. Machine-made runners in 'Moroccan style' are particularly common at this shape because the runner format reduces the amortised cost of low-quality production. Always ask for a back-of-rug photograph before purchase. Weight check: a 2.5×8 hand-knotted wool runner weighs roughly 5 to 7 kg; significantly lighter indicates synthetic or machine-made.

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 sizes do Moroccan runners come in?
Standard sizes: 2×6, 2.5×8, 2.5×10, 3×12 ft. Custom commissions run to 16 ft long. Width typically 2 to 3 feet; wider available but uncommon.
How wide should a hallway runner be?
Roughly two-thirds the width of the hallway, with equal floor borders on each side. A 4-ft hall: 2.5-ft runner. A 5-ft hall: 3-ft runner.
Can a Moroccan runner work in a kitchen?
Yes — wool stands up to kitchen traffic well, and spills can be blotted without staining if addressed quickly. Beni Ourain and Azilal runners work better than darker traditions which show food debris more.
What does a hand-knotted Moroccan runner cost?
Direct from co-operative: $900–$1,400 for 2.5×8 Beni Ourain; $1,500–$2,400 for 3×12. Beni Mrirt high-density: roughly 1.6–1.8× those prices.
How long does a runner take to weave?
About three weeks for a 2.5×8 at standard 80 KPSI; four to five weeks for a 3×12. Add a week for wool preparation and finishing.
Are vintage Moroccan runners available?
Yes, occasionally — but vintage runners tend to come in irregular dimensions because they were woven for specific household corridors. Custom commission is more practical when exact sizing matters.
Do runners shed like full rugs?
Yes — wool runners shed loose fibres for the first three to six months. Vacuum gently weekly with the beater bar off. Shedding subsides as the rug settles.

Sources & References

What this page rests on

  1. 1. Atlas Cooperative Runner Production
  2. 2. Interior Designer Guild Hallway Standards
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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