Enjoy free shipping on all orders

Arrow Fat Left Icon Arrow Fat Right Icon Arrow Right Icon Cart Icon Close Circle Icon Expand Arrows Icon Facebook Icon Instagram Icon Pinterest Icon Hamburger Icon Information Icon Down Arrow Icon Mail Icon Mini Cart Icon Person Icon Ruler Icon Search Icon Shirt Icon Triangle Icon Bag Icon Play Video

Moroccan Cactus Silk Sabra - K8

Moroccan Cactus Silk Sabra - K8
Moroccan Cactus Silk Sabra - K8
Moroccan Cactus Silk Sabra - K8
Moroccan Cactus Silk Sabra - K8
Moroccan Cactus Silk Sabra - K8

Sizes

Size 5.8x9.4

Medium

Price

$ 850.00

Size

Size 5.8x9.4

Medium

Material

Sabra Silk Cactus

Price

$ 850.00

Quantity

- +
For custom orders, please fill out the form below.

Product Info

Complimentary shipping 

Moroccan Essaouir silk sabra Kilim

Our quality is often imitated but never matched.

Moroccan rug motifs influenced designers such as Ivan Da Silva Bruhn and Vladimir Boberman. American Interior Designer Francis Elkins used them in some of her most notable interiors in the 1930’s and 1940’s.
By Raz,

Essaouira handmade cactus silk textiles or Mogador as it was once called, is one of the most famous little places in Morocco. Orson Welles came here when he needed a location for Othello, and centuries earlier the Portuguese captured the town in an attempt to dominate Atlantic trade. It is not hard to see why Welles chose this old fishing port, idyllically situated on a promontory overlooking the Atlantic Ocean. Even today, Essaouira, weather viewed from the sea, from the fort guarding the harbor entrance or from inside the narrow laneways of the old city, is unchanged since the time when it was a Portuguese stronghold. Long before Welles came here to make a film, the Romans came to make purple. On a tiny island just off the entrance to the harbor, Emperor Juba II established dye works for the production of purple, the most sought-after colour in the Roman Empire. As a symbol of rank and honor, the prestige attached to a purple cloak was unimaginable. Thus the dye works entrusted with this rare and precious commodity were kept strictly low-profile. The tribal inhabitants of Mauritania, as it was then known, were already skilled in preparing dyes from local vegetable and mineral sources. Indigo was used for blues and greens, madder root for red, pomegranates skins for black, saffron and almond leaves for yellow, and tea and henna for red-brown earth tones. This tiny island just off the coast of Essaouira, one of the Iles Purpuraires, was selected because the dye for purple comes from the murex shell.

CUSTOM MADE 

For most discerning rug buyers, we fulfill custom orders for rugs produced from scratch. If you have a specific size and design in mind, please inquire.

RETURNS
Our customers have two weeks return policy and one year trading policy for other sizes or design.

Only 1 available