Moroccan Rug 6×9 — The Mid-Size Living-Room Standard
Six feet by nine feet — 183 by 274 centimetres — is the most frequently ordered size at virtually every Western Moroccan-rug retailer. It fits the standard American living-room footprint of a three-cushion sofa, two flanking chairs, and a coffee table; it works as a dining-room rug under a six-seat table; and it sits beautifully at the foot of a king bed. The ubiquity is not accidental — it is the dimension where weaver time, wool consumption, shipping cost, and visual scale all converge on a sensible commercial point. A 6×9 Beni Ourain takes one weaver roughly six weeks; the wool use sits around 7 to 9 kilograms; the freight cost is still air-courier feasible.
Why 6×9 Became the De Facto Standard
Three factors put 6×9 at the centre of Western Moroccan-rug buying. First, American sofa and coffee-table manufacturing standards: most three-cushion sofas are 84–96 inches, and 6×9 (72×108 inches) extends past either end by 6–12 inches — the textbook proportion interior designers teach. Second, the dimension is the largest size that still ships via DHL Express as a single parcel under most international weight thresholds. Third, the price point sits in the $2,000–$4,000 band for direct co-operative buys of real hand-knotted wool — accessible to a serious buyer without crossing into investment-piece territory.
It is also the size at which the visual impact of a true hand-knotted rug — the irregular pile height, the abrash variation, the individual character of knot work — becomes fully legible. Smaller rugs compress these qualities; larger ones spread them across so much surface that the eye stops registering them as a continuous artefact.
What 6×9 Looks Like in Three Common Rooms
Living room (14×18 ft): sofa front legs on the rug, coffee table centred, chairs at corners with front legs on the rug. The 6×9 creates a defined seating conversation area. Six to eighteen inches of bare floor remains visible on each side, which prevents the room feeling crammed.
Dining room (12×14 ft): six-seat table (60–72 inches long) on the 6×9. Chairs stay on the rug when pushed back to seat. Wool stands up to chairs dragged across it; jute or sisal will fray within months under the same use.
King bedroom (14×16 ft): rug at the foot, extending 16–20 inches past either side of the bed and roughly 30 inches past the foot. The texture underfoot when getting out of bed is the underrated reason serious buyers prefer a wool 6×9 over the larger jute alternatives.
Cost Anatomy of a 6×9 Hand-Knotted
Knot count at 80 KPSI (Beni Ourain standard): approximately 62,200 hand-tied knots. Weaver days at 9,000 knots/day: about 42 days — six weeks of weaving alone. Wool use: 7 to 9 kg finished, drawn from 12 to 16 kg of raw fleece. At higher Beni Mrirt density (130 KPSI), the same dimension contains roughly 101,000 knots — eleven weeks of weaving.
Honest cost at the co-operative for an 80-KPSI 6×9 Beni Ourain in undyed live-sheared wool: $1,800 to $2,800. Higher-density Beni Mrirt: $4,500 to $9,500. Add 15–25% for direct retail by a Moroccan workshop, or 200–400% for a Western boutique with showroom and middleman costs.
What Separates a Good 6×9 from a Great One
Three quality markers distinguish a great 6×9 from an acceptable one. First: wool grade. Live-sheared wool from sheep at 1,800m+ altitude has the lanolin content and crimp that make a rug feel cool in summer and warm in winter. Dead-pulled wool (taken from deceased animals) is dry, dull, and stiff — a common shortcut in lower-cost rugs. Second: consistency of knot row alignment. Rows should be straight and parallel; wandering rows indicate an inexperienced weaver or rushed work. Third: edge finishing. Selvedges should be tight, even, and fully wrapped; loose or frayed edges are a sign of poor finishing.
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よくあるご質問
質問
- Is 6×9 the same as 6'×9' or 180×270 cm?
- Approximately yes. 6 ft × 9 ft equals 183 × 274 cm. Hand-woven rugs vary by 2–5 cm in either direction, so listings may show 180×270, 185×275, or similar.
- How many knots in a 6×9 Beni Ourain?
- At 80 KPSI: approximately 62,200 hand-tied knots. At 130 KPSI (Beni Mrirt grade): approximately 101,100 knots.
- How long does it take to weave a 6×9?
- Six weeks for one weaver at standard 80-KPSI Beni Ourain. Eleven weeks for a 130-KPSI Beni Mrirt. Two weavers working together can roughly halve those times.
- Can a 6×9 fit under a king-size bed?
- It works at the foot of a king bed extending past the sides. For the full under-bed treatment (bed centered on the rug), you need 8×10 or 9×12.
- What does a real 6×9 hand-knotted Moroccan cost?
- Direct from a Moroccan co-operative: $1,800–$2,800 for an 80-KPSI Beni Ourain; $4,500–$9,500 for high-density Beni Mrirt. Western boutique markup typically 2–4×.
- Will a 6×9 Moroccan rug shed?
- Yes for the first 3–6 months. This is normal — loose fibres from hand-carding work loose during initial use. Vacuum weekly with the beater bar disengaged. Shedding subsides as the rug settles.
- How heavy is a 6×9 wool Moroccan rug?
- Roughly 16 to 22 kilograms (35–48 lbs) for genuine hand-knotted wool. Tufted rugs with latex backing are notably heavier; synthetics noticeably lighter.
Sources & References
What this page rests on
- 1. Atlas Co-operatives Wool Survey 2023
- 2. American Society of Interior Designers
- 3. DHL Morocco Freight Tariff

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