Large Moroccan Rug — Hand-Knotted Wool at Architectural Scale
'Large' in the Moroccan rug market typically means anything 9×12 ft (274×366 cm) or bigger — the size at which a rug transitions from furnishing to architectural element. A large rug anchors entire rooms rather than seating areas, and at this scale every quality decision compounds: a knot-density step from 80 to 130 KPSI adds 65,000+ knots and 6+ weeks of weaving; a switch from co-operative wool to estate-fleece adds noticeable material cost. Buyers shopping in this category are typically furnishing primary living spaces and treating the rug as a 30-to-50-year object — which is how Atlas weavers have always treated their work.
What Counts as 'Large' in This Market
The size brackets used by Western Moroccan-rug retailers are: small (4×6 and under), medium (5×7 to 6×9), standard (8×10), large (9×12 to 10×14), and oversized (12×15 and up). The 'large' band — 9×12 through 10×14 — is where the majority of serious residential commissions land. It is the scale at which a single rug can define an entire room rather than punctuate a seating arrangement.
Volume considerations: a 9×12 weighs 22–30 kg and ships as a courier parcel in most markets. A 10×14 at 40–55 kg requires palletised freight. Anything 12×15 or larger almost always travels as sea freight with a customs broker. Shipping logistics scale faster than people expect; include freight in budget conversations early.
Why Large Rugs Are Genuinely Rare
Loom width is the limiting factor. Most Atlas co-operative looms are configured for rugs up to 8 ft in warp width. Looms capable of 9 ft are common; 10 ft moderately common; 12 ft scarce. Above 12 ft, single-piece weaving becomes exceptional — most very large 'Moroccan' rugs in the 12×18 or 14×20 range are actually two pieces joined invisibly at a central seam, which is honest practice but worth being told about.
Weaver capacity is the other limit. A single weaver produces roughly 8,000–10,000 knots per day. A 10×14 at standard density is 161,000 knots — five months of one-weaver work, or roughly two months with three weavers on the same loom. Many co-operatives can't dedicate that team time to a single commission, which is why large rugs often have 16–24 week lead times from order to ship.
Cost Anatomy at Large Scale
Rough ranges, direct from co-operative, in undyed live-sheared wool, 80 KPSI Beni Ourain: 9×12 — $3,800 to $5,800; 10×14 — $4,500 to $7,200; 12×15 — $6,500 to $11,000. High-density Beni Mrirt at the same dimensions runs roughly 2.5 to 3× those numbers because of the additional weaving time.
Western boutique retail typically applies a 2.5 to 4× markup over co-operative pricing, which is why a 9×12 Beni Ourain in a New York or London gallery often sits at $12,000 to $18,000. That markup pays for showroom presentation, sales labour, and importer overhead — it is not additional craft value.
Authenticity at This Scale
Large rugs are the most-counterfeited segment in the Moroccan-rug market because the price points make machine-made imitations commercially attractive. A 9×12 hand-knotted wool rug at $1,500 is virtually impossible by labour math; the same dimension in machine-made polypropylene or hand-tufted Indian production with latex backing is common at that price. Back-of-rug photography, provenance documentation (co-operative name, approximate weaving period), and weight verification are non-negotiable at this scale.
Hva du kan verifisere om oss
- Direkte innkjøp
- Atlas-kooperativerIngen mellomledd mellom veveren og deg.
- Konstruksjon
- Håndknyttet ullVerifisert i hvert trinn — aldri maskintuftet.
- Opphav
- Dokumentert per stykkeLandsby, veveperiode og, der vi har det, veverens navn.
- Retur
- 14 dagerI mottatt stand, full refusjon av kjøpesummen.
Ofte stilte
Spørsmål
- What size counts as a 'large' Moroccan rug?
- 9×12 ft (274×366 cm) and up. The 'large' bracket extends through 10×14; 12×15 and above are typically called 'oversized.'
- Why are large hand-knotted Moroccan rugs so expensive?
- Loom availability is limited (few looms wider than 10 ft exist), and weaving time scales with surface area — a 10×14 takes 4–5 months of weaver work. Honest cost at the co-operative reflects 16–22 weeks of labour.
- Can I commission a custom large Moroccan rug?
- Yes — most established co-operatives accept commissions for any dimension up to 12×15 (and joined-piece work above that). Lead time 12–24 weeks; you specify tradition, dimension, motif, colour, and density.
- How heavy is a large Moroccan rug?
- 9×12 hand-knotted wool: 22–30 kg. 10×14: 40–55 kg. 12×15: 65–90 kg. Tufted with latex backing weighs notably more; synthetic machine-made notably less.
- Do large rugs ship internationally?
- 9×12 typically ships via DHL Express as a courier parcel ($150–$280). 10×14 generally requires palletised air cargo or sea freight. 12×15 and up: sea freight with customs broker.
- How long does delivery take for a large custom rug?
- From order to ready-to-ship: 12–24 weeks for a 9×12 to 10×14 commission; 16–28 weeks for 12×15. Add shipping transit (1 week air, 4–6 weeks sea).
Sources & References
What this page rests on
- 1. Atlas Co-operative Loom Inventory 2024
- 2. Beni Mrirt Weaving Records

Personen bak stykket
«Før du kjøper, sender jeg deg en video av det faktiske teppet i dagslys — ikke et katalogbilde. Jeg svarer på meldingene selv.»
Jeg heter Youssef. Jeg startet ARINID fordi dette markedet er fullt av mellomledd og maskinlagde imitasjoner som selges som ekte — og jeg vokste opp nær nok vevstolene til å kjenne forskjellen.
Hvert stykke vi fører kan spores tilbake til kooperativet som vevde det. Vil du snakke om mål for rommet ditt, er jeg i den andre enden av meldingen. Et teppe på dette nivået er en beslutning for tretti år. Du bør kunne se den som selger det til deg i øynene.
Youssef
Grunnlegger, ARINID
Neste steg
Se hvert Large Moroccan Rug vi tilbyr akkurat nå
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