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Natural Wool Moroccan Rug — Why the Material Matters

'Natural wool' in the context of Moroccan rugs means wool from Atlas mountain sheep — Sardi, Beni Guil, Timahdite, D'man breeds — produced and processed by traditional methods. The wool's specific properties (lanolin content, fibre crimp, staple length) come from these specific sheep breeds living at specific altitudes on specific mountain forage. Replicating these properties with industrial wool from other regions or synthetic fibres produces something visually similar but structurally different. Knowing what makes Atlas wool specifically valuable helps you evaluate rug provenance and understand pricing structures.

Properties of Atlas Mountain Wool

Lanolin content: 8–14% by weight in raw fleece, dropping to 2–4% in finished yarn after gentle washing. The lanolin coats each fibre, gives the characteristic slight grease, repels water and stains, and provides natural moth resistance.

Fibre diameter: 24–34 microns depending on breed. Timahdite at the fine end (24–30 microns) produces softer-feeling rugs; Sardi (28–34) is the standard Middle Atlas wool. Both are medium-fine — coarser than fashion merino, finer than broadloom carpet wool.

Staple length: 8–18 cm depending on breed and shearing schedule. Long staple supports finer spinning and stronger yarn. Sardi produces the longest staples among Atlas breeds, which is part of why it's favoured for premium production.

Crimp: the natural waviness in individual wool fibres. Atlas wool typically shows 8–14 crimps per inch — the springy quality that gives finished rugs their characteristic resilience under foot traffic.

Why Altitude Matters

Higher-altitude sheep produce fleece with more lanolin and finer fibre — natural responses to colder temperatures and more weather exposure. The same breed at different altitudes produces different fleece. 1,800m+ altitude wool is noticeably finer and richer than 800–1,200m altitude wool from the same breed.

Premium Moroccan rug co-operatives source specifically from 1,800m+ altitude flocks and document the specific shepherd and pasture range. Mid-tier production uses commodity wool from broader altitude ranges. The altitude specification is one of the key markers of premium production.

Live-Sheared vs Dead-Pulled

Live-shearing: wool removed from the live animal during seasonal moult. The lanolin coat is preserved intact. Atlas traditional production uses live-shearing exclusively. The animal is alive and uninjured; only the fleece is taken.

Dead-pulling: wool removed from deceased animals at slaughter. The lanolin has degraded; the wool is dryer and structurally less suitable for premium weaving. Mass-market wool production often uses dead-pulled wool because it's cheaper.

Difference in finished rugs: live-sheared wool feels slightly oily and has characteristic spring; dead-pulled wool feels dry and stiff. The difference is subtle but real — and specialists can identify it within seconds of touching a finished rug.

Hand-Spinning vs Machine-Spinning

Hand-spun yarn shows characteristic slubs (slight thickness variations) and twist variation that industrial spinning eliminates. These irregularities translate to softer hand-feel and more pliable structure in the finished rug.

Hand-spun wool also retains more of the original fibre length — the spinning process is gentler than industrial spinning, which tends to break longer staples. Long staples produce smoother, stronger yarn.

Premium contemporary Moroccan production uses hand-spun yarn. Mid-tier uses machine-spun yarn from hand-carded wool. Mass-market uses machine-spun yarn from industrially processed wool. Each tier produces structurally distinct finished rugs.

Ciò che potete verificare su di noi

Approvvigionamento diretto
Cooperative dell’AtlanteNessun intermediario tra il tessitore e voi.
Costruzione
Lana annodata a manoVerificata in ogni fase — mai tuftata a macchina.
Provenienza
Documentata per pezzoVillaggio, periodo di tessitura e, dove disponibile, il nome del tessitore.
Resi
14 giorniNello stato ricevuto, rimborso completo del prezzo d’acquisto.

Domande frequenti

Domande

What is natural wool in a Moroccan rug?
Wool from Atlas mountain sheep breeds (Sardi, Beni Guil, Timahdite, D'man) produced and processed by traditional methods. Distinct from synthetic fibres or wool from other regions in lanolin content, fibre crimp, and staple length.
Why does Atlas wool feel different?
Combination of high lanolin content (8–14% in raw fleece), specific fibre crimp (8–14 crimps per inch), long staple length, and traditional live-shearing that preserves the lanolin coat. Hard to replicate with industrial wool from other regions.
Is Moroccan wool finer than merino?
Generally no — merino is 16–22 microns fibre diameter; Atlas wool is 24–34. Atlas wool is medium-fine, with the lanolin and crimp characteristics that suit hand-knotting rather than the extreme fineness of fashion merino.
What is live-sheared wool?
Wool taken from a living animal during its natural seasonal moult. The lanolin coat is preserved intact. Standard for premium Moroccan production. The alternative — dead-pulled wool from slaughtered animals — lacks lanolin and produces structurally different finished rugs.
Does altitude really affect wool quality?
Yes — higher-altitude sheep produce fleece with more lanolin and finer fibre as natural responses to colder temperatures. 1,800m+ altitude wool is noticeably better than 800–1,200m from the same breed.
Can I get a Moroccan rug with documented wool source?
Premium co-operatives can document the specific shepherd, altitude range, and shearing date. This documentation is part of what justifies premium pricing. Mid-tier production typically uses commodity wool without documentation.
How can I tell natural wool from synthetic in a finished rug?
Touch (lanolin grease vs slick synthetic), smell (faint sheep odour vs petroleum or plastic), weight (5×7 wool: 11–15 kg vs synthetic 4–7 kg), and burn test on one fibre (wool burns slowly with hair smell; synthetic melts to hard bead).

Sources & References

What this page rests on

  1. 1. Atlas Wool Quality Research
  2. 2. International Wool Textile Organisation
Youssef, fondatore di ARINID

La persona dietro il pezzo

«Prima dell’acquisto vi invio un video del tappeto reale alla luce naturale — non una foto di catalogo. Rispondo io stesso ai messaggi.»

Sono Youssef. Ho fondato ARINID perché questo mercato è pieno di intermediari e di imitazioni fatte a macchina vendute come autentiche — e sono cresciuto abbastanza vicino ai telai da conoscere la differenza.

Ogni pezzo che proponiamo risale alla cooperativa che lo ha tessuto. Se volete parlare delle dimensioni per la vostra stanza, sono dall’altra parte del messaggio. Un tappeto a questo livello è una decisione di trent’anni. Dovreste poter guardare negli occhi chi ve lo vende.

Youssef

Fondatore, ARINID

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