9' x 12' Area Rugs
Color
Pile Height (Thickness)
Material
Rug Shape
Price Per Item
Stickley
For our Chobi Trellis rug, a modern vine and trellis design is transformed with flowing traditional lines and soft tones of earth and sky. This rich, restrained piece is hand-knotted from hand-spun, vegetable-dyed wool in the Northwest Frontier region of Pakistan.
Inspired by the work of William Morris, the 19th-century poet, politician, and designer, our English Arts and Crafts rug displays a fresh color palette and gracefully stylized imagery based on English fields and garden flowers. This tightly knotted carpet has a density of 256 hand-tied knots per square inch, fashioned by master weavers around the city of Lahore, Pakistan.
Inspired by the works of Frank Lloyd Wright and his Prairie School of Architecture, this rug is designed to resemble a stained-glass window. Wright considered his stained glass to be an abstract of nature that allowed light in to illuminate and enhance a room. Our Prairie rug is hand-knotted by Nepalese weavers using wool from Himalayan Highland sheep.
Named for a park in Harvey Ellis's hometown of Rochester, NY, the Highland Park rug features a simple, well-balanced border motif that pays tribute to his acclaimed, nature-inspired inlay designs. This distinctive rug, hand-knotted by Nepalese weavers using wool from Himalayan Highland sheep, works effortlessly with any of Stickley's collections.
In this evocative abstract rug, seemingly random swaths of color create a look that echoes the natural world. It also offers the durability, enhanced stain-resistance, and shimmering beauty of wool and silk, hand-crafted in Nepal with a dense pile of 100 knots per square inch.
Inspired by Dard Hunter's 1906 stained glass windows at the Roycroft Inn in East Aurora, NY, our Monterey Grove rug features the tulip, a celebrated design element in the Arts and Crafts movement. This stunning piece is hand-knotted by Nepalese weavers using wool from Himalayan Highland sheep.
Out of Stock
In the region of Anatolia in present-day Turkey, rug weaving can be traced as far back as 1272, when a visiting Marco Polo described remarkable carpets characterized by rich colors, warm tones, and extraordinary geometric patterns. This hand-knotted wool rug, crafted in India, shares those elements; its weave of dramatic dark and light tones pairs beautifully with any of Stickley's collections.