INDIGO & RUST - 48

€1,090.00

≈ 192 × 118 cm

Labyrinthine medallions winding through deep indigo fields, chevrons marching along cream grounds, and at the center of it all — the çömçalı, coiling and uncoiling across every band.

This kilim has lived. You can feel it.

  • Handcrafted in Fethiye (Turkey)

  • Antique — late 19th century, woven when the old ways were still the only ways

  • Naturally dyed in deep indigo blue and aged madder red — colors that have only grown richer with time

  • Warm, earth-toned cream ground — undyed wool at its most honest

  • Woven in the rare cicim technique — additional weft threads floating above the surface, creating a texture you can feel with your fingers

  • One of a kind — never repeated, never mass-produced

  • Fine, densely woven wool — built to outlast everything

A piece of living history, ready to find its next home.

Dominating motif: Çömçalı (Ladle) — two diagonal forms coiling around each other across alternating indigo and cream bands, one of the most archaic motifs in Anatolian weaving, its original meaning lost to time but its power entirely intact.

≈ 192 × 118 cm

Labyrinthine medallions winding through deep indigo fields, chevrons marching along cream grounds, and at the center of it all — the çömçalı, coiling and uncoiling across every band.

This kilim has lived. You can feel it.

  • Handcrafted in Fethiye (Turkey)

  • Antique — late 19th century, woven when the old ways were still the only ways

  • Naturally dyed in deep indigo blue and aged madder red — colors that have only grown richer with time

  • Warm, earth-toned cream ground — undyed wool at its most honest

  • Woven in the rare cicim technique — additional weft threads floating above the surface, creating a texture you can feel with your fingers

  • One of a kind — never repeated, never mass-produced

  • Fine, densely woven wool — built to outlast everything

A piece of living history, ready to find its next home.

Dominating motif: Çömçalı (Ladle) — two diagonal forms coiling around each other across alternating indigo and cream bands, one of the most archaic motifs in Anatolian weaving, its original meaning lost to time but its power entirely intact.