For definitions of  other terms not listed here, please go to these sections: How It’s Made,  Styles, and Before You Buy.
  Age 
  Age classifies how old the rug is. All handmade rugs are  placed within these three categories: Antique, Semi-Antique, and Contemporary.
All-over 
  This is a rug layout that has no central or dominant design.  In many cases, the motifs on the rug are scattered across the rug.
Antique 
  A rug that is at least 6 decades old is considered Antique.
Arabesque 
  Intertwining vines, branches, leaves, or blossoms make up  this motif. They may be woven in patterns that are curvilinear or geometric. An  example of Arabesque is the Islamic motif.
Average 
  A rug in which minor repairs have been made, or may be  needed. These repairs could involve warp strands that need attention or the  repair/ replacement of several knots or fringes.
Background color 
  The dominating color in the rug’s background. Red, blue,  beige and yellow are the most popular background colors and are expressed in  many different hues and shades.
Border color 
  The major color of the rug’s border. Red, blue, beige,  yellow and green are the most widely used in a full spectrum of hues and  shades.
Braid
  The interweaving of three or more stands in a diagonally overlapping  pattern.
Brocading 
  A type of flat weaving in which the foundation of the rug is  patterned by colored weft strands.
Category 
  The various locations where handmade rugs are created.  Usually classified as Master Workshop, Workshop, Village or Nomadic.
Chrome Dyes 
  These are synthetic products created between the First and  Second World Wars for dyeing weaving yarns. They are produced in an unlimited  array of beautiful colors and hues. Chrome dyes are colorfast, they keep their  bright intensity even when exposed to sunlight and washing.
Color 
  One of the signatures of handmade rugs. Every handmade rug  is identified by its border and background colors. These colors are the result  of natural or synthetic dyes.
Condition 
  This characteristic classifies the status of a rug from a  quality standpoint. In the handmade rug industry, there are 3 possible  conditions: Worn, Average and Fine.
Contemporary 
  The classification of a handmade rug that is less than 25  years of age.
Cotton 
  In handmade rugs, this is the central material used to  create its foundation.
Curvilinear 
  Patterns expressed through smooth, flowing, curving lines.
Dye 
  The process of changing the natural color of materials such  as wool, silk, and cotton. There are two kinds of dyes: Natural Dyes and  Synthetic Dyes.
Fine 
  The handmade rug industry considers a “fine” rug to be in  excellent shape without any holes, tears, stains or prior repair work.
Flat Weave 
  No knots are used in the flat weave technique of creating  handmade rugs.
  The weft strands are merely passed through the warp strands.  The Kilim rug is an example of the flat weave technique.
Foundation
  This is the basic structural element of a handmade rug and  consists of Warps and Wefts.
Fringe
  These are the warps that extend from the foundation at the  rug’s end.
  Their function is to hold the rug together and prevent the  wefts from unraveling.
Geometric 
  These are handmade rug patterns utilizing straight lines.
Gul
  The Persian word for flower or rose, the gul is a medallion,  either octagonal or angular in shape, and is used in the creation of Turkoman  rugs
Hand-knotted 
  Another word for a homemade rug.
Hand-Tufted
  A hand-tufted rug is created without tying knots into the  foundation, but rather by pushing wool or acrylic yarn through a primary  backing, creating a “tuft”.
Iran 
  Iran was known as Persia until the 1930’s. Iran is believed  to produce about three-quarters of all the handmade rugs in the world.
Kilim
  The most recognized group of flat-woven rugs. See Flat  Weave.
Knot 
  Rugs that are pile-woven or knotted are produced by knots.  The two most used knots are called Asymmetrical and Symmetrical.
Kork 
  Sheared from the belly of a sheep, this is very fine wool.
Layout 
  The overall arrangement of motifs or objects are woven into  a rug.
Loom
  The structure that holds warp strands taut for weaving and  knotting. Looms can be in various configurations: vertical, horizontal, fixed  or mobile.
Madder
A Southwest Asian plant displaying small yellow flowers,  spiraled leaves, and a red root. Its root was, and in some places still is, a  key source of red dye.
Make 
  A characteristic that determines where a handmade rug is  actually created.
Master Workshop 
  These are specialty workshops typically managed by a  well-known master designer/artist. His or her subordinates are skilled students  directed by the master designer. Here, unique handmade rugs are the rule.
Medallion 
  A typical rug layout in which a large centerpiece, called  the medallion, is the design’s focal point.
Medallion-and-corner 
  A rug design utilizing quartered medallions in each corner  of the rug, plus the full medallion in the center of the rug.
Minor border 
  Narrower bands, on each side of the main border, are  referred to as minor borders or guard strips.
Motif 
  Any single form or integrated group of forms that make up  part of the overall design of a homemade rug.
Nap 
  The direction in which the pile of the rug faces.
Natural Dyes 
  Natural dyes include plant dyes, animal dyes, and mineral  dyes. Until the late nineteenth century, these were the only dyes used for  coloring weaving yarns.
Nomadic Rugs 
  These are the products of sheepherders who mainly live in  tents and migrate from the valleys to the mountain pastures in the summer.  Usually, these rugs are small because they have to be completed in time to  migrate.
One-sided 
  A rug layout in which the design is woven in one direction.
Pattern 
  The way lines are used to form shapes on a rug. The handmade  rug industry recognizes three classes of patterns: Pictorial, Geometric and  Curvilinear.
Pictorial 
  This is a pattern in which people and animals are the focus.
Pile 
  The material (fiber) used for weaving handmade rugs. Cotton,  silk, and wool are the primary pile materials.
Pile Weave 
  Pile weave, or knotted weave, is the most common technique  used in the weaving of handmade rugs. In this method, the rug is woven through  the creation of knots.
Runner 
  A rug that is long, narrow and rectangular. They are used in  hallways, stairways, and entrances. That’s why they are also called Corridor  rugs.
Semi-antique 
  Rugs between 25 and 60 years old.
Silk 
  Is derived from the cocoon of silkworms. It’s an expensive  fiber and less used as a pile material in handmade rugs than wool.
Size 
  The measurements of a rug. Handmade rugs are made in  different sizes and shapes. Only rectangular shapes are sold in standard sizes  because most handmade rugs are rectangular.
Soumak 
  Flat-woven rugs where no knots are used in the weave.
Style 
  It’s the way different motifs, colors, and patterns give  character to a rug.
Synthetic Dyes 
  Dyes made chemically beginning in the mid-nineteenth century  for dyeing rug weaving yarns.
Textile
  A product produced by weaving.
Village Rugs 
  Rugs made by villagers. There, most family members or the  women of the family are weavers and work in their home. More types of rug  styles are woven by villagers than by any other weaving category.
Warp 
  Vertical strands of fiber. They stretch from the top to the  bottom of the rug and knots are tied to them.
Weave 
  The technique used in weaving handmade rugs. There are three  classic techniques: Pile Weave, Flat Weave, and Hand Tufted.
Weft 
  Horizontal strands of fiber. They are woven through the  warps and added before and in between the rows of knots to keep the knots in  place.
Wool 
  The coat of sheep. In handmade rugs, wool is the most used  pile material.
Workshop 
  Where weavers work as employees and highly talented weavers  can become master weavers. Workshop weavers are more seasoned and professional than  those in nomadic tents or villages.
Yarn
  A continuous strand of twisted threads of natural or  synthetic material.