Green Moroccan Rug — Olive, Sage, and Indigo-Yellow Overdye
Green is the most chemically complex colour in traditional Moroccan rug production. No single natural dye source produces true green — traditional Atlas dyers achieve greens by overdyeing yellow wool with indigo, producing olive greens, sage tones, and deep forest greens depending on the exact yellow source and the indigo concentration. The process is skilled and time-intensive, which is why green appears less frequently in traditional Moroccan rugs than red, blue, or brown. Contemporary production uses synthetic green dyes for consistency, but the natural overdye tradition produces colour depths that synthetic dyeing struggles to replicate.
Why Green Is Complicated
The natural Atlas dye vocabulary includes no green-producing plant or mineral source. Madder gives red. Indigo gives blue. Walnut gives brown. Pomegranate gives yellow. Weld gives yellow. There is no direct green. Traditional dyers achieve green by overdyeing — dyeing wool yellow first, then redyeing with indigo. The combined yellow-and-blue produces green, with the specific tone depending on the concentration and timing of each dye bath.
Olive greens come from pomegranate-yellow with light indigo overdye. Sage greens from weld-yellow with medium indigo. Forest greens from heavier indigo overdye on saturated yellow base. Each shade requires specific timing and mordant chemistry in two separate dye baths — twice the dyer's labour as a single-source colour.
Where Green Appears in Atlas Tradition
Glaoua rugs from the High Atlas include green elements more frequently than other traditions. The Glaoua tradition combines pile and flat-weave construction in the same rug and uses a wider colour palette than most Atlas weaving — deep greens appear in some documented Glaoua pieces alongside the more standard reds, browns, and creams.
Azilal includes occasional green motifs against cream backgrounds. The greens are typically the overdyed naturals — olives, sages, muted forest tones — rather than the brilliant greens of contemporary synthetic-dye production.
Boucherouite occasionally features green fabric strips from recycled clothing. The greens vary widely depending on what fabric was available — t-shirt greens, uniform greens, military-surplus greens. Each Boucherouite is unique in its specific green tonality.
Beni Ourain: pure dark-on-cream Beni Ourain rarely uses green. Some regional sub-tribal variations include occasional green motifs, but green is not characteristic of the tradition's core aesthetic.
Where Green Moroccan Rugs Work
Olive-green Moroccan rugs work in warm earth-toned interiors — rooms with terracotta, ochre, warm wood, and aged leather. The olive tonality bridges the warm side of green into the brown family, fitting traditional and rustic interiors.
Sage and soft mineral-green rugs work in Scandinavian-leaning interiors with cool light and natural materials. The sage green anchors against pale wood and white walls without the warmth-introduction that olive provides.
Deep forest greens work as anchoring colour in libraries, studies, and rooms intentionally designed around darker palettes. The visual weight of a deep-green rug pulls the room toward contemplative interior moods.
Pricing for Green Moroccan Rugs
Green is uncommon in traditional Moroccan rugs, so availability is more limited than for red, blue, or cream pieces. New green Azilal or Glaoua at 5×7: $1,600–$2,500. 9×12: $5,500–$9,500. The overdye process adds production labour, which is reflected in the premium over standard single-dye colour pricing.
Vintage green Moroccan rugs are rarer still. Documented vintage Glaoua or Azilal pieces with strong green elements: 5×7 at $2,000–$5,000; 9×12 at $7,500–$20,000. Specialist vintage dealers carry occasional documented pieces; broader online availability is limited.
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
- How is green achieved in Moroccan rugs?
- Traditional: overdyeing — yellow-dyed wool (from pomegranate or weld) redyed with indigo. The combined yellow-and-blue produces green. Contemporary production may use synthetic green dyes directly.
- Which Moroccan tradition uses green most?
- Glaoua (High Atlas) has the widest traditional use of green among recognised Moroccan traditions. Azilal includes occasional green motifs. Boucherouite features green from recycled fabric sources.
- Is green common in Beni Ourain?
- Rarely. Classic Beni Ourain is dark-brown-on-cream; green is not characteristic. Some regional Beni Ourain sub-tribes include occasional green motifs but the tradition is dominantly brown-and-cream.
- Are green Moroccan rugs natural-dyed?
- Traditional production: yes — overdyeing yellow with indigo, both natural sources. Contemporary production often uses synthetic green for consistency. The overdye process produces deeper, more complex colour than single synthetic green.
- Where does a green Moroccan rug fit?
- Olive green: warm earth-toned interiors. Sage green: Scandinavian cool-light interiors. Forest green: libraries, studies, intentionally dark-palette rooms. The specific green tone determines the right context.
- How much does a green Moroccan rug cost?
- 5×7 new at co-operative: $1,600–$2,500. 9×12: $5,500–$9,500. Vintage premium applies — 1970s–80s green Azilal or Glaoua 9×12 runs $7,500–$20,000.
- Why is green more expensive than red or blue?
- The overdye process requires two separate dye baths (yellow then indigo), doubling the dyer's labour for the same wool quantity. Single-source colours (madder red, indigo blue) are faster to produce.
Sources & References
What this page rests on
- 1. Overdye Chemistry in North African Weaving
- 2. Glaoua Tradition Documentation

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
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