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Flat Weave Moroccan Rug — Hanbel, Glaoua, and Berber Kilim Tradition

Flat-weave Moroccan rugs — known as Hanbel in most Atlas regions and Glaoua in the High Atlas — are kilim-style hand-woven textiles produced without pile. The pattern is created by the interlocking of weft yarn with the warp rather than by knotted tufts standing up off the foundation. The result is a thinner, lighter, more affordable rug that works particularly well in specific contexts: under dining tables (chairs slide smoothly), in warmer climates (less insulating than pile), and as layering pieces under pile rugs. They are also faster to weave — a 9×12 Hanbel takes 3–5 weeks versus 11 weeks for a hand-knotted Beni Ourain — which makes them accessible at lower price points without compromising the hand-craft tradition.

How Flat Weave Differs Structurally

Pile rugs (Beni Ourain, Beni Mrirt, Azilal) build pattern by tying individual knots that stand up off the foundation, creating soft pile with the pattern in the colour changes between knots.

Flat-weave rugs (Hanbel, Glaoua) build pattern by passing weft yarn over and under warp threads in specific sequences, packing each row tight. The pattern is in the weave itself, with no pile on top. The rug is essentially a thick fabric — 3–6mm total thickness versus 2–4cm for pile rugs.

Where Flat Weave Works Best

Dining rooms: chairs slide smoothly on flat weave; pile catches and wears at chair positions. A 9×12 Hanbel under a six-seat dining table is the textbook application.

Hallways and entryways with low door clearance: flat weave fits under doors that pile rugs would catch on.

Layering: flat-weave Hanbel as base with smaller pile rug (Azilal, Boucherouite) on top is the classical bohemian layering technique.

Warmer climates: less insulating than pile, more appropriate for hot summer rooms where pile would feel oppressive.

Kitchens: lighter weight allows easier rotation and cleaning; less pile means less debris trapping.

Pricing — Why Flat Weave Is More Accessible

A 9×12 Hanbel kilim takes 3–5 weeks to hand-weave; a 9×12 Beni Ourain takes 11 weeks. Material use is lower (no pile = less yarn). Pricing reflects this directly: 5×7 Hanbel direct from co-operative: $600–$1,100. 9×12: $1,400–$2,400.

Glaoua tradition (more complex patterns, sometimes mixed pile-and-flat construction) commands premium pricing. 9×12 Glaoua: $2,200–$4,500. The complexity of the patterning approaches pile-rug weaving time in the most elaborate Glaoua pieces.

Durability Considerations

Flat-weave rugs last 25–40 years with normal care — slightly less than pile (30–50 years) because the weave is exposed at the surface rather than protected by a pile layer. Abrasion wears flat weave slightly faster.

Care is similar to pile: weekly gentle vacuum (beater bar off — even more important on flat weave), spot-clean spills immediately, professional clean every 3–5 years. Flat-weave rugs can be washed at home more easily than pile because the lighter weight and faster drying make full-immersion practical.

Lo que puede verificar sobre nosotros

Abastecimiento directo
Cooperativas del AtlasSin intermediarios entre el tejedor y usted.
Construcción
Lana anudada a manoVerificada en cada etapa — nunca tuftada a máquina.
Procedencia
Documentada por piezaAldea, periodo de tejido y, cuando lo tenemos, el nombre del tejedor.
Devoluciones
14 díasEn el estado recibido, reembolso íntegro del precio de compra.

Preguntas frecuentes

Preguntas

What is a flat weave Moroccan rug?
A hand-woven Moroccan rug without pile — the pattern is in the weave itself rather than in knotted tufts on top. Examples: Hanbel kilim, Glaoua. Structurally thinner than pile rugs.
Is flat weave the same as kilim?
Yes — kilim is the broader term for flat-woven rugs across Mediterranean and Central Asian traditions. Hanbel and Glaoua are specific Moroccan kilim traditions.
Why are flat weave rugs cheaper?
Faster to weave (no individual knot tying), less material (no pile yarn). 9×12 Hanbel: 3–5 weeks vs 11 weeks for 9×12 pile Beni Ourain. Pricing reflects the labour difference directly.
Where does a flat weave Moroccan rug work?
Dining rooms (chairs slide smoothly), hallways with low door clearance, warmer climates, layering with pile rugs on top, kitchens. Less ideal in high-traffic living rooms where pile's structural durability matters more.
Will a flat weave Moroccan rug last?
25–40 years with normal care — slightly less than pile (30–50 years) because the weave is exposed at the surface. Care is similar; flat weave is easier to wash at home.
What does a flat weave Moroccan rug cost?
5×7 Hanbel direct from co-operative: $600–$1,100. 9×12: $1,400–$2,400. Glaoua (more complex patterns): $2,200–$4,500 for 9×12. Western retail typically 2–3× these prices.
Can I put a flat weave under a dining table?
Yes — this is one of the best uses for flat weave. Chairs slide more easily than on pile, the lighter weight allows easier rotation and cleaning, and the wool handles dining-room traffic well.

Sources & References

What this page rests on

  1. 1. Hanbel Tradition Documentation
  2. 2. Berber Flat-Weave Comparison
Youssef, fundador de ARINID

La persona detrás de la pieza

«Antes de comprar, le envío un vídeo de la alfombra real con luz natural — no una foto de catálogo. Yo mismo respondo los mensajes.»

Soy Youssef. Creé ARINID porque este mercado está lleno de intermediarios e imitaciones hechas a máquina que se venden como auténticas — y crecí lo bastante cerca de los telares como para conocer la diferencia.

Cada pieza que ofrecemos se remonta a la cooperativa que la tejió. Si quiere hablar de las medidas para su estancia, estoy al otro lado del mensaje. Una alfombra de este nivel es una decisión de treinta años. Debería poder mirar a los ojos a quien se la vende.

Youssef

Fundador, ARINID

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