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Moth Damage in Oriental Rugs: How to Identify, Treat, and Prevent

By the Cohen Family11-minute readMay 26, 2026
Close-up of moth-damaged antique wool rug showing larvae casings

Moths do not bite the rug overnight. The damage you can see — bare patches in the pile, frayed fringes, a weakened foundation — is the cumulative work of larvae living in the rug for weeks or months, eating the wool from the underside while the surface looks fine. This guide shows you how to identify an active infestation in its earliest stages, why over-the-counter treatments destroy antique wool, what the atelier protocol actually does, and the storage discipline that keeps the next generation from coming back.

The moth lifecycle.

Two species do the damage you see on antique rugs: the webbing clothes moth and the casemaking clothes moth. The adult is a small pale gold creature, no bigger than a fingernail, that you almost never see — it shuns light and flies poorly. The adult is not the problem. The larva is.

The female adult lays between forty and a hundred eggs over a few days, glued to the underside of a wool fiber. Eggs hatch in seven to fourteen days. The larvae — small pale grubs — spend the next thirty to sixty days eating wool. They build silk webbing tubes, or pebble-shaped casings made from the wool they have eaten, and live inside them while they feed. When they have eaten enough, they pupate, and a new adult emerges. The full cycle is thirty to sixty days in warm conditions.

The implication for your rug is straightforward. By the time you see a hole in the pile, that hole is the result of weeks of feeding. The moths are already on their second or third generation. Treating quickly is the difference between a localised repair and a full foundation rebuild — and the earlier you find them, the less of the rug is at stake.

Six visual signs of moth damage.

Webbing. Fine silk-like threads on the underside of the rug, especially in corners and under furniture where the rug rarely moves. Catches the light. The most common early sign.

Casings.Pebble-shaped tubes — sometimes the same colour as the wool they have eaten — stuck to the back of the rug or to the foundation between knots. The casemaking moth carries its casing while it feeds; finding empty casings means a generation has already emerged.

Frass. Fine sandy material the colour of the wool, gathered along the rug edges or where the rug meets the floor. This is the digested wool, and it is the most reliable confirmation that larvae are active.

Gnaw patterns.Bare patches in the pile, usually starting in dark colours (larvae prefer wool with natural lanolin and protein) and progressing outward. Often appears in low-traffic areas first — under sofas, behind chairs, the rug edges.

Fringe loss. Fringes that have unravelled or look shortened. Larvae eat the foundation knots that anchor the fringe, and the fringe sheds.

Foundation weakening.The rug feels different to the hand — spongy or papery where it should feel firm. This is structural damage and it requires the bench, not just the wash floor.

Detail of foundation rebuild on a moth-damaged antique Persian rug
Foundation rebuild on the bench.

Why over-the-counter treatment destroys antique wool.

Hardware-store moth sprays are formulated for wall-to-wall synthetic carpet and modern clothing. The active ingredient is usually a pyrethroid in a solvent carrier. On synthetic fiber, this works as advertised. On antique wool dyed with vegetable colours — madder, indigo, walnut hull, pomegranate skin — it is a different story.

The solvent carrier strips natural lanolin from the wool, the fiber the rug needs to remain supple and reflective. The pH is wrong for vegetable dyes, which can shift colour or migrate across the foundation under contact with alkaline or acidic chemistry. The residue stays in the rug, attracting dust and yellowing the cream and ivory tones over months. And the surface treatment does not reach the larvae living inside the foundation knots, so the infestation continues underneath while you watch the rug get progressively duller.

Cedar blocks and lavender sachets are gentler but also less effective. They repel adult moths weakly and do nothing to larvae already in the rug. They are a complement to good storage discipline, not a treatment. For any antique with active damage, the rug needs to come to the atelier.

The atelier's moth-treatment protocol.

Step one is the inspection. Every rug arriving with suspected moth damage is photographed front and back, laid on the inspection table, and read by hand from both sides. We find every active gnaw zone, every casing, every weak warp. The full extent of damage is documented before any water touches the rug, and the wash plan and restoration plan are written from what we see.

Step two is the hand-wash, calibrated specifically for moth-infested antique wool. Temperature, soap pH, and contact time are adjusted to kill every life stage — eggs glued to fibers, larvae in webbing tubes, pupae in casings — without damaging the dyes or the foundation. Antique pieces are washed individually. The rinse is slow and thorough, leaving no residue.

Step three is the bench work. With the rug cleaned and dry, the master artisan rebuilds the foundation where moths have weakened the warp and weft, reweaves missing knot rows, and binds fringes or selvedges that have been eaten. Yarn is colour-matched and tension-matched to the original weave. Step four is the second-pass inspection: the rug is checked under raking light, the cleanliness and integrity confirmed, and only then signed off and returned home.

Foundation rebuild — when moths weaken the structure.

The foundation of an oriental rug is the lattice of warp and weft threads that the knots sit on. When larvae eat through warps, the rug loses its structural integrity — the knots no longer have a stable substrate, and the rug begins to come apart along the lines of damage. Continued use accelerates the loss. The repair is to replace the affected warps and wefts by hand, then reweave the missing knots in matched yarn.

On a contemporary piece this is a few hours at the bench. On an antique it is days or weeks. The complexity is in the matching: the new yarn has to read as the original from both sides, the new knots have to lock into the existing weave without distorting the drawing, and the tension has to be even across the join. Done well, the repair disappears into the rug. Done poorly, it shows from across the room.

This is restoration on the bench, not a service that scales. We do it by hand, in our atelier, by the master artisan. Every foundation rebuild is photographed, documented, and itemised separately on the quote, so you see exactly what was done.

Prevention discipline: storage, rotation, humidity, inspection.

Moths love the rug that does not move. Under furniture, in low-traffic corners, in the off-season closet. The first prevention discipline is rotation — every six months, turn the rug 180 degrees. This redistributes wear and, more importantly, disturbs any larvae that have settled in to feed.

The second is the off-season store. Before any rug goes into storage, it is washed — moths are drawn to wool with body oils, food residue, and dust ground into the pile. A clean rug is far less attractive. Wrap rolled (never folded) in acid-free paper or unbleached muslin, never plastic, which traps moisture and breeds mildew. Store off the floor, in a cool dry climate-controlled space, away from light.

The third is the seasonal inspection. Twice a year, lift the corners of every wool rug in the home and check the underside. Look for webbing in the dark spots, casings along the foundation, frass along the edges. Vacuum the floor under the rug at the same time — you are not vacuuming the rug, you are vacuuming the floor and the rug edges where eggs settle. Done as a discipline, these three habits make active moth infestation a rare event in a well-cared-for home.

The Atelier Perspective

By the time the hole shows, the moths have been feeding for weeks. The inspection finds them earlier — and an earlier inspection is the difference between a quiet repair and a foundation rebuild.

— The Cohen Family

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