Round Moroccan Rug — Hand-Knotted Berber Circles
Round Moroccan rugs occupy an unusual category. Traditional Berber weaving is rectangular by structural necessity — a loom has parallel warps that produce straight edges. A round Moroccan rug is therefore one of two things: either a rectangular hand-knotted weaving cut and bound to a circle, or a hand-tufted product made from the start as a circular form (with no weaving structure underneath the surface pattern). The first is genuine; the second is a different thing entirely. Knowing which you are buying matters more at this shape than at any other.
How a Round Moroccan Rug Is Actually Made
A genuine round Moroccan rug begins as a square or near-square hand-knotted weaving — typically a 7×7 or 8×8 — produced on a normal Atlas loom. After weaving, the rug is removed from the loom and a circle is marked on the pile side using a compass string. The pile is then carefully shaved at the marked line, and the new circular edge is hand-bound with wool yarn to prevent unravelling.
This process is structurally inefficient — 20–30% of the woven material is lost to the corners that get trimmed off. That waste is part of why genuine round hand-knotted Moroccan rugs cost more per square foot than rectangular equivalents. The alternative — hand-tufted round 'Moroccan' rugs — skip the loom entirely and use a punching gun to push yarn through a circular canvas backing. These lack the structural integrity of hand-knotted weaving and degrade faster.
Where Round Rugs Make Sense
Round rugs work in three specific configurations: under a round dining table (where rectangular rugs leave awkward exposed corners), centred in a circular entryway (where they echo architectural geometry), or in a children's play area or reading nook where the soft edge feels less formal. Outside these scenarios, round rugs tend to look added-on rather than considered.
Common round diameters: 120 cm (4 ft) for small accent areas; 180 cm (6 ft) for a round-table dining footprint or reading nook; 240 cm (8 ft) for a larger dining table or central living-room anchor; 300 cm (10 ft) for grand entries and statement installations.
Pricing for Round Hand-Knotted
Because 20–30% of the parent square weaving is lost to trimming, round hand-knotted Moroccan rugs cost roughly 25–35% more per square foot of usable surface than rectangular equivalents. A 180 cm (6 ft) round in Beni Ourain at 80 KPSI runs approximately $1,400–$2,200 at the co-operative. A 240 cm (8 ft) round: $2,600–$4,200. A 300 cm (10 ft) round: $4,500–$7,500.
Hand-tufted alternatives in the same diameters are available at significantly lower prices ($350–$800 for similar diameters) — but these are not the same object. They lack the knot structure that makes Atlas-woven wool rugs last forty-plus years.
Care Considerations Unique to Round Rugs
The bound circular edge is the structural vulnerability of a round Moroccan rug. Unlike the fringe-and-selvedge edge of a rectangular rug — which is woven directly into the structure — the round edge is added in finishing. Over time, particularly on rugs that get moved frequently or vacuumed aggressively at the edge, the binding can loosen. Yearly inspection of the bound edge is worthwhile; small re-binding repairs are inexpensive if caught early.
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 a round Moroccan rug made?
- A square or near-square rug is hand-knotted on a normal loom, then a circle is marked, the pile shaved to that line, and the new round edge hand-bound with wool yarn.
- Why do round Moroccan rugs cost more per square foot?
- Because 20–30% of the parent woven square is lost to trimming the corners. The labour to produce the underlying weaving is the same; the usable surface is smaller.
- Are hand-tufted round 'Moroccan' rugs the same thing?
- No. Hand-tufted round rugs use a punching gun to push yarn through a canvas backing — there is no weaving structure. They look similar from the pile side but lack the durability of hand-knotted weaving.
- What round sizes are most useful?
- 180 cm for round dining tables or reading nooks; 240 cm for larger dining tables or living-room anchors; 300 cm for grand entries. Below 120 cm becomes more decorative than functional.
- Can I commission a custom round diameter?
- Yes — most co-operatives accept custom round commissions in any diameter from 100 cm to 300 cm. Lead time runs 8 to 14 weeks depending on density and dimension.
- Do round Moroccan rugs come in all traditions?
- Beni Ourain, Azilal, Boucherouite, and Boujaad are all regularly produced as round commissions. Kilims and Hanbels (flat-weaves) are less commonly made round because the flat-weave structure unravels more aggressively at cut edges.
Sources & References
What this page rests on
- 1. Atlas Cooperative Custom Order Records
- 2. Berber Weaving Techniques Handbook

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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