Image 1 of 5
Image 2 of 5
Image 3 of 5
Image 4 of 5
Image 5 of 5
MIDNIGHT - 33
≈ 141 × 90 cm
Not just a kilim — a cicim. A rarer weaving technique where additional threads are hand-worked into the surface, creating a density and depth that a flat-weave simply cannot achieve.
Vertical columns rise from bottom to top, each filled with diamond forms, each diamond filled with smaller forms still. There is no empty space here — every thread has a purpose.
Handcrafted in Mersin (Turkey) using the traditional cicim technique with supplementary weft threads
Naturally dyed in black and ivory
Vibrant synthetic dyes in orange, teal, green and rose — typical of late 19th to early 20th century Anatolian weaving
One of a kind — never repeated, never mass-produced
Vintage — carrying the complexity of serious age
High-quality wool, built to last generations
A rare, dark piece, ready to find its next home.
Dominating motif:Fingered Diamond Columns (Parmakli Elmas) — diamond forms rising in vertical columns, a structural principle associated with the indigenous weaving tradition of western Anatolia.
≈ 141 × 90 cm
Not just a kilim — a cicim. A rarer weaving technique where additional threads are hand-worked into the surface, creating a density and depth that a flat-weave simply cannot achieve.
Vertical columns rise from bottom to top, each filled with diamond forms, each diamond filled with smaller forms still. There is no empty space here — every thread has a purpose.
Handcrafted in Mersin (Turkey) using the traditional cicim technique with supplementary weft threads
Naturally dyed in black and ivory
Vibrant synthetic dyes in orange, teal, green and rose — typical of late 19th to early 20th century Anatolian weaving
One of a kind — never repeated, never mass-produced
Vintage — carrying the complexity of serious age
High-quality wool, built to last generations
A rare, dark piece, ready to find its next home.
Dominating motif:Fingered Diamond Columns (Parmakli Elmas) — diamond forms rising in vertical columns, a structural principle associated with the indigenous weaving tradition of western Anatolia.