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Worn Afghan Carpet with Octagonal Güls

Afghanistan & Central Asia

Worn Afghan Carpet with Octagonal Güls

Old Carpets

A deeply worn Afghan main carpet in the Ersari/Turkmen tradition, its oxblood-red field carrying two columns of large octagonal elephant-foot güls. Years of use have abraded the pile to a low, glossy sheen and softened the dark indigo detailing into the red ground — the lived-in patina collectors prize. Likely woven in northern Afghanistan.

The tradition

Afghanistan & Central Asia

This shelf gathers older Afghan and Turkmen carpets that have already lived a life. Decades of use soften a carpet's wool and gently mellow its dyes, giving the deep madder reds and dark blues a patina — the prized, lightly burnished glow that collectors look for and that no new carpet can imitate.

Most pieces here belong to the Turkmen and Afghan tribal tradition, built around repeating gül medallions on a red ground, a design language that has stayed remarkably constant across generations of nomadic and village weavers.

Motifs & meaning

Reading the design

Tribal Afghan and Turkmen carpets speak in repeating, heraldic motifs rather than scenes.

  • Gül

    A tribe's heraldic medallion, repeated across the field as a mark of identity.

  • Elephant-foot (Filpa)

    The bold octagonal gül of Afghan weaving.

  • Diamond lattice

    Order, fertility and the woven structure of the land.

  • Kufic-style border

    An angular guard band offering protection.

Materials & technique

How it is made

Hand-knotted in wool with the dense, hard-wearing build of Central Asian tribal weaving. Age and use have burnished the surface and settled the natural dyes into a warm, lived-in patina.

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