Saltar al contenido

Thick Moroccan Rug — Plush Pile and Why It Matters

'Thick Moroccan rug' usually means one specific thing: a Beni Ourain with a long pile, woven at the traditional Middle Atlas pile depth of 3–4 cm (roughly 1.2–1.6 inches). This is significantly thicker than most contemporary rugs, including most other Moroccan traditions. The thickness comes from longer pile yarn at standard knot density — each knot is left longer before trimming, producing a plush hand-feel that defines the Beni Ourain aesthetic. Knowing what actually produces this thickness, and what trade-offs come with it, lets you specify exactly what you want in a commission or evaluate listings against your expectations.

What Creates Thickness in a Moroccan Rug

Thickness in a hand-knotted rug comes from two variables: pile length (how long each individual knot tuft is) and pile density (how many knots per square inch). Beni Ourain traditionally uses long pile (3–4 cm) at moderate density (70–100 KPSI) — the long pile is the dominant contributor to felt thickness. Beni Mrirt uses shorter pile (1.5–2.5 cm) at higher density (130–180 KPSI) — denser but less tall, producing a different kind of thickness.

Both are 'thick' in different senses. Beni Ourain feels plush — the long pile compresses noticeably under foot and springs back. Beni Mrirt feels dense — the higher knot count produces a more structurally robust feel without the long-pile bounce. For pure tactile thickness against bare feet, Beni Ourain is the right choice. For structural density and weight, Beni Mrirt.

Why Pile Depth Affects Function

Thick pile traps air, which provides real thermal insulation. A 4 cm Beni Ourain on a cold floor creates a measurable warm zone — the kind that actually keeps feet warm during cold mornings. This is more than aesthetic; it is functional in cold-floor environments. Hardwood and stone floors in winter benefit from thick rugs more than from area rugs of any other tradition.

Sound absorption: thick pile absorbs footstep noise and reduces room echo. Rooms with hard floors, glass walls, or high ceilings tend to have echo problems that thick rugs address. A 9×12 Beni Ourain in a high-ceiling loft can reduce reverb noticeably.

Underfoot comfort: long pile cushions footsteps and reduces fatigue during long periods of standing or walking. Kitchens, home offices, and any room with extended standing time benefit from thick rugs.

Trade-Offs of Thickness

Thick rugs catch furniture legs. The high-pile structure resists chair legs and table legs being dragged across it. Furniture has to be lifted rather than dragged. In dining rooms where chairs are repeatedly pulled in and out, thick rugs experience more wear than thinner rugs at the chair positions.

Door clearance: a 3–4 cm pile rug needs roughly 4–5 cm of door clearance from the floor. Many interior doors are set at 1 cm clearance and will drag on thick rugs. Check door clearance before committing to a high-pile Beni Ourain in spaces with interior doors.

Vacuum compatibility: thick pile requires gentle vacuuming with the beater bar disengaged. Standard upright vacuums with rotating brushes tear at long pile and accelerate wear. Either disengage the beater bar or use canister-vacuum hose attachments.

Specifying Thickness in a Commission

Standard Beni Ourain pile depth: 2.5–3 cm. This is what most co-operatives produce by default and what most buyers receive when they order 'Beni Ourain' without further specification.

Plush specification: 3.5–4 cm. Specify 'long pile' or 'plush pile' in commission. Adds 10–15% to weaving time because more yarn is needed per knot and finishing takes longer.

Ultra-plush: 4.5–5 cm. Some specialist co-operatives produce this pile depth on request. Adds 20–30% to weaving time and price. Approaches the visual character of shag rugs while maintaining hand-knotted Atlas structure.

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 makes a Moroccan rug thick?
Pile length — how long each individual knot tuft is left before trimming. Standard Beni Ourain pile: 2.5–3 cm. Long-pile specification: 3.5–4 cm. Ultra-plush: 4.5–5 cm. The traditional Beni Ourain aesthetic is at the longer end of this spectrum.
Which Moroccan tradition makes the thickest rugs?
Beni Ourain — traditionally 3–4 cm pile, the thickest in the Atlas weaving vocabulary. Beni Mrirt is denser but lower-pile (1.5–2.5 cm). Other traditions (Azilal, Boujaad) typically use 2–3 cm pile.
Will a thick rug fit under my door?
Standard interior doors are set at 1 cm clearance. A 3–4 cm thick rug needs 4–5 cm clearance. Check before committing. Doors can be planed shorter by a carpenter if needed (typical cost $50–$120 per door).
Why are thick rugs warmer?
Thick pile traps air, which provides thermal insulation. A 4 cm Beni Ourain creates a measurable warm zone on cold floors. Real functional benefit in cold-climate homes.
Can a thick rug work under dining tables?
Workable but not ideal. Chairs catch on long pile when pushed back, and the chair-position areas wear faster. For dining rooms, a flat-weave kilim or lower-pile Beni Mrirt usually performs better.
How do I clean a thick Moroccan rug?
Weekly vacuum with the beater bar disengaged (rotating brushes tear at long pile). For deeper cleaning every 3–5 years, use a specialist hand-knotted-wool cleaner; avoid steam cleaners and synthetic detergents.
What does an extra-thick Beni Ourain cost?
Standard pile Beni Ourain 9×12: $3,800–$5,800 direct from co-operative. Long-pile specification (3.5–4 cm): $4,300–$6,600. Ultra-plush (4.5–5 cm): $5,000–$7,500. Premium reflects additional yarn and weaving time.

Sources & References

What this page rests on

  1. 1. Beni Ourain Production Standards
  2. 2. Atlas Co-operative Commission Records
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

Escríbeme directamente →

El siguiente paso

Vea cada Thick Moroccan Rug que ofrecemos actualmente

Cada pieza se anuda a mano en el Atlas y se envía directamente a su puerta, con origen y tejedor documentados.

Redacción Arinid854 palabras2 fuentes citadas