[Master Artisan Name] — the hands that touch every rug.
[Master Artisan Name] is the master rug artisan of the Cohen family. Every rug brought into our atelier is inspected by [Master Artisan Name] personally, by hand, before any work begins. [Master Artisan Name] writes the wash plan, supervises the wash floor, performs hand-restoration on the bench, and signs off on every rug before it is returned to your home. Trained for more than a decade in [tradition PLACEHOLDER:client-data], with thousands of antique oriental, Persian, and silk rugs hand-washed across the Northeast.
A decade of training, by hand.
[Master Artisan Name] trained for more than a decade in [tradition PLACEHOLDER:client-data] before opening the first Cohen family atelier. The training covered every layer of the craft — reading fibers and foundations by hand, identifying vegetable dyes by colour and behaviour, hand-washing antique Persians of every great workshop, and restoring foundations and pile that had been weakened by water, moths, or time.
Today [Master Artisan Name] supervises every rug that passes through any of our four ateliers. The same hand that reads your rug on arrival is the hand that hand-washes it, restores it where needed, and signs off on its return. We do not outsource the work, and we do not delegate the inspection.
Six things [Master Artisan Name] reads before any wash.
Every rug is inspected by hand on arrival. The wash plan is written from what the rug shows us — never a template, never a guess.
Fiber
Wool grade and origin — mountain wool from Iran, Anatolia, Tibet, or modern New Zealand. Silk filaments read under hand and light. Cotton, linen, and jute weft identified at the edge.
Foundation
Warp count, weft pattern, knot density, and structural integrity read by hand. Hand-knotted Senneh or Ghiordes knots identified. Weak warps flagged for foundation repair before the wash.
Dyes
Vegetable, synthetic, or mixed. Madder, indigo, walnut hull, pomegranate skin, and cochineal identified by colour and behaviour. Every colour dye-tested for bleed risk before water touches the rug.
Prior repairs
Earlier restorations read for quality. Poor reweaves, machine-stitched fringe replacements, and improper colour matches are noted and either preserved or reworked, depending on the rug.
Structural damage
Moth larvae, dry rot, water damage, sun-fade, dye bleed from prior washes, and pet damage all logged. Each receives a different treatment in the wash plan.
Restoration approach
Reweaving, fringe binding, selvedge repair, colour restoration, or none of the above. The master artisan writes the plan, signs off on it, and supervises every stage in the atelier.

The slow craft, on the bench.
Hand-restoration is the slowest part of the craft. Foundation repair, reweaving, fringe binding, selvedge restoration, and colour restoration are all performed by [Master Artisan Name] and the family artisans on our restoration bench, in our atelier, by hand.
For antique pieces the yarn is colour-matched and tension-matched to the original weave so the repair disappears into the rug. We re-knot Senneh and Ghiordes knots by hand, we colour-match dye lots by eye, and we never use a machine on a piece that was woven on a loom.
Restoration is never rushed. Most pieces are on the bench for three to six weeks. Every rug gets the time it needs — nothing leaves the atelier until [Master Artisan Name] signs off on it.
Letters from across the Northeast.
A few of the rugs we've cared for — and the families who trusted us with them.
“They returned an heirloom Tabriz — the colors look exactly as my grandmother described them.”
“A 1920s Heriz I thought was beyond saving came back better than the day my parents bought it.”
“Our clients trust us with eight-figure homes. Horizon is the only atelier I send their rugs to.”
Questions, honestly answered.
What clients ask us before they hand over a rug — and how we answer.
Who personally inspects my rug at the atelier?
What does the master artisan do during the wash?
How long has the master artisan trained in this craft?
Does the master artisan do the restoration work personally?
How does the master artisan handle vegetable-dyed antiques?
Who personally inspects my rug at the atelier?
What does the master artisan do during the wash?
How long has the master artisan trained in this craft?
Does the master artisan do the restoration work personally?
How does the master artisan handle vegetable-dyed antiques?
More from Horizon.
Other ateliers, every service we offer, and the rest of our story — a few directions to explore.
Bring us the rug.
Tell us about the piece — antique oriental, Persian, silk, fine wool, restoration. [Master Artisan Name] will personally inspect your rug on arrival. Complimentary pickup across Manhattan, the Hamptons, Westchester County, Greenwich, and Stamford.
By hand · By the Cohen family · By appointment