Black and White Moroccan Rugs
When most people search for a 'black and white Moroccan rug,' they are looking for a Beni Ourain — undyed ivory wool with charcoal-black diamond motifs across the field. The configuration is the most internationally recognised Moroccan rug aesthetic and has been continuously photographed in design magazines since Le Corbusier first placed one in the Villa Savoye in 1929. This page covers the specific palette dynamics of the black-and-white Beni Ourain — what produces the charcoal, how the contrast varies across pieces, and which interiors the configuration suits best.
Where the Black Actually Comes From
The 'black' in a black-and-white Beni Ourain is not dyed wool. It is undyed wool from black sheep — a specific breed within the Atlas pastoral flocks that produces darker fleece. The colour can range from very dark charcoal (almost true black) to deep espresso brown to lighter slate, depending on the individual sheep.
This is part of what gives Beni Ourain its particular character — the entire rug is made from undyed natural wool, with the contrast coming from sheep genetics rather than from any applied dye. The technical implication: the contrast is permanent (the colour is the wool itself, not a coating), the dark wool will not fade differently from the light wool over time, and the variation in dark tone across the field is part of authentic character rather than a quality flaw.
Contrast Variation Across Pieces
Different Beni Ourain pieces show different contrast intensities depending on what kind of dark wool was available to the weaver. Three broad categories:
High contrast — dark charcoal/near-black motifs on bright ivory field. Graphic, photographable, the most visually 'black-and-white' configuration. Premium-priced because the darkest wool is rarer.
Medium contrast — espresso brown motifs on cream field. Warmer, less graphic, often perceived as more elegant in older mid-century interiors. The most common configuration in vintage pieces.
Lower contrast — slate or charcoal motifs on oat-cream field. Quieter, more subtle, sometimes preferred in contemporary interiors where the high-contrast version reads as too declarative.
Motif Density Variations
Beni Ourain pieces vary not just in contrast but in motif density — how much of the field is covered by the dark geometry.
Heavy motif: 30-50% of the field carries dark decoration. Large diamonds, dense linework, potentially multiple geometric vocabularies in one rug. Visually energetic.
Standard motif: 20-30% dark coverage. The typical configuration in mid-century Beni Ourain pieces and in most contemporary production.
Light motif: 10-20% dark coverage. Sparse diamonds, narrow border lines, large predominantly-ivory field. Suited to minimalist interiors where the rug should anchor rather than declare.
Pricing for Black-and-White Beni Ourain
Contemporary museum-quality, 200×300 cm: €1,500-€3,500.
Premium high-contrast variant: €2,200-€4,200. The darker wool is rarer and commands premium.
Vintage with provenance: €3,000-€15,000+. Documented mid-century pieces with named weavers can exceed €25,000 at major auction houses.
Below €1,000: examine carefully. The black-and-white Beni Ourain is the most imitated Moroccan rug configuration. Most sub-€800 'black and white Moroccan rugs' are Turkish or Indian factory imitations.
Where Black-and-White Beni Ourain Works
Modernist interiors: the configuration that Le Corbusier specified in 1929 and that Eames and Mies van der Rohe perpetuated. Anchors white walls, pale wood, structural restraint.
Mid-century revival interiors: the textile of choice for any space referencing 1945-1970 design vocabulary.
Scandinavian-modern interiors: works particularly well in lower-contrast variants (espresso-on-cream rather than near-black-on-ivory).
Japandi interiors: works in minimal-motif configuration. The high-contrast version can be too visually energetic for the strictest japandi vocabulary.
Where it doesn't work: heavily patterned interiors (the rug competes), warm-coloured rooms (the cool contrast clashes), bohemian interiors (the discipline reads as too restrained — choose Azilal or Boucherouite instead).
Ce que vous pouvez vérifier à notre sujet
- Sourcing direct
- Coopératives de l’AtlasAucun intermédiaire entre le tisserand et vous.
- Fabrication
- Laine nouée mainVérifiée à chaque étape — jamais touffetée à la machine.
- Provenance
- Documentée par pièceVillage, période de tissage et, lorsque nous l’avons, le nom du tisserand.
- Retours
- 14 joursDans l’état reçu, remboursement intégral du prix d’achat.
Questions fréquentes
Questions
- Why are Moroccan rugs black and white?
- The 'black and white' Moroccan rug is the Beni Ourain — undyed ivory wool combined with dark charcoal wool from black sheep, producing a two-colour textile entirely from natural wool. The combination became famous through mid-century modernist architects who specified it as the default modernist floor textile.
- Is the black in a Beni Ourain rug dyed?
- No — it is undyed wool from black sheep. Same wool, same processing as the ivory portions. The contrast is natural sheep genetics, not applied dye.
- What's the best black and white Moroccan rug to buy?
- Beni Ourain with medium-to-high contrast diamond motifs, 200×300 cm (8×10 ft), with documented village provenance. Expect €1,800-€3,500 for contemporary museum-quality.
- Do black and white Moroccan rugs fade?
- Marginally and asymmetrically over decades. The undyed wool is more stable than dyed wool, but extended direct sunlight will eventually soften both the ivory (toward warmer cream) and the dark (toward warmer espresso). Rotate the rug every six months to distribute exposure.
- Are black and white Moroccan rugs still in style?
- Continuously since 1929. The Beni Ourain has been the default rug of every major Western modernist design movement of the past century. Its longevity is not a trend; it is the absence of trend.
- Can I get a black and white Beni Ourain in 9×12?
- Yes — 9×12 is one of the standard sizes for contemporary production. Expect €2,400-€5,500 for museum-quality. Lead time for custom commissioning runs 4-6 months.
- How is a black and white Moroccan rug different from a Persian rug?
- Different cultural origin (Berber vs Iranian), different technique (symmetric vs asymmetric knot), different design vocabulary (abstract diamonds vs ornate medallion). They serve different aesthetic purposes — Moroccan for modernist/minimalist; Persian for traditional/maximalist.
- Where can I see authentic black and white Moroccan rugs in person?
- Specialist dealers in major Western cities (London, Paris, New York, Marrakech), auction house previews (Sotheby's, Christie's, Bonhams), and museum textile collections (MoMA, V&A, Centre Pompidou hold examples). Avoid generic home-decor retailers for verification.
Sources & References
What this page rests on
- 1. wikipedia — Beni Ouarain
- 2. internal_researchNatural sheep-genetic origin of Beni Ourain dark wool
- 3. design_historyLe Corbusier Villa Savoye specification 1929

La personne derrière la pièce
« Avant l’achat, je vous envoie une vidéo du tapis réel à la lumière du jour — pas une photo de catalogue. Je réponds moi-même aux messages. »
Je suis Youssef. J’ai créé ARINID parce que ce marché regorge d’intermédiaires et d’imitations faites à la machine vendues comme authentiques — et j’ai grandi assez près des métiers à tisser pour connaître la différence.
Chaque pièce que nous proposons remonte à la coopérative qui l’a tissée. Si vous voulez parler des dimensions pour votre pièce, je suis au bout du message. Un tapis de ce niveau est une décision de trente ans. Vous devez pouvoir regarder dans les yeux la personne qui vous le vend.
Youssef
Fondateur, ARINID
La prochaine étape
Découvrez chaque Black and White Moroccan Rug que nous proposons actuellement
Chaque pièce est nouée à la main dans l’Atlas et expédiée directement chez vous, avec origine et tisserand documentés.