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Knowledge · Persian Rugs

What is a Sarouk rug?

A Sarouk rug is a hand-knotted Persian carpet woven in the Sarouk district of west-central Iran, distinguished by its fine pile, jewel-tone palette, and the famous American-market floral spray on burgundy and navy grounds. Sarouks dominated American imports from the 1910s through the 1940s.

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Definition

What is a Sarouk rug?

The Persian that built the American parlor.

Sarouk (sometimes Saruk) is a village in the Arak region of west-central Iran. Sarouk rugs are fine village-workshop weaving from this district, knotted at 140 to 300 per square inch on a cotton foundation, with lustrous Arak-region wool that takes dye richly. The whole rug has a softer, fuller hand than a tightly clipped workshop Tabriz or Kashan.

The famous “American Sarouk” design — detached floral bouquets scattered across a burgundy or navy ground — emerged in the 1910s as an American import phenomenon and dominated production through the 1940s. Earlier antique Sarouks favored the classic central medallion typical of Persian workshop weaving.

Origin & History

The Persian that crossed the Atlantic.

Sarouk weaving in its early form — classic Persian central medallion on a richly drawn vegetable-dyed ground — dates to the late 19th century. The finest of these pre-1910 pieces, particularly the Mohajeran Sarouk village master work, are now among the most prized antique Persians on the market.

From around 1910, American importers in Manhattan re-tooled Sarouk production for the American taste of the era: solid burgundy or navy fields with detached floral spray bouquets, calibrated specifically for American Edwardian and early-modernist parlors. Many were shipped undyed and chemically re-dyed in New York. Sarouks dominated American imports through the 1940s, and the “American Sarouk” remains one of the most recognizable Persian rugs in American homes today.

Construction

How a Sarouk is built.

A Sarouk is knotted on a tight cotton warp and cotton weft using the asymmetric Persian knot, at 140 to 300 per square inch on village-workshop pieces. The Arak-region wool is lustrous and medium-long-staple — it takes vegetable dye richly and softens beautifully with age. The drawing is rendered from a stencil or simple cartoon, but with finer detail than typical village work.

Vegetable dyes dominate antique Sarouks: madder for the burgundy field, indigo for navy, walnut for brown. From the 1910s, early synthetic dyes and the famous American chemical re-dyeing entered the equation — which is why color stability varies significantly across the “American Sarouk” period.

Knot Density
140–300 per in²
Fine village-workshop range; tight enough for floral drawing.
Fiber
Arak-region wool
Lustrous, takes dye richly; medium-long staple.
Dyes
Vegetable + early synthetic
Jewel-tone burgundy, navy, sage, ivory.
Foundation
Cotton warp, cotton weft
Tight, taut foundation typical of west-central Persia.
Identification

How to identify a Sarouk.

  • Design

    Allover floral spray on a solid field, or central medallion with rich floral spandrels. The classic American Sarouk is detached floral bouquets scattered across a burgundy or navy ground.

  • Palette

    Jewel-tone burgundy or navy field, with floral sprays in soft red, ivory, gold, and pale blue. The whole rug reads warm and saturated.

  • Border

    Main border of floral garland or palmette-and-vine, two or three narrow guard borders. Drawing matches the field — floral rather than geometric.

  • Pile

    Medium-deep, lustrous Arak-region wool. Sarouks have a noticeably softer, fuller hand than Tabriz or Kashan workshop pieces.

  • Fringe

    Cotton fringe at the ends, often knotted. Edges are flat-wrapped in wool; selvedges are clean and tight.

Sizes & Variations

Four variants you will see.

Sarouks appear from scatter (2×3) through room (9×12) and large palace formats. American Sarouk room sizes are by far the most common in American homes.

American Sarouk

1910s–1940s. Detached floral spray on burgundy. The classic American-parlor Persian.

Mohajeran Sarouk

Early-20th c. master village production. Finer drawing, richer palette, premium collectible.

Antique Sarouk

Pre-1910 pieces. Often central medallion rather than American spray; deeper vegetable palette.

Workshop Sarouk

Contemporary fine workshop weaving from the Arak region. Classic medallion or floral.

Care

Caring for a Sarouk rug.

Sarouk rugs are hand-washed by our master artisan, never machine-cleaned. American Sarouks especially require careful dye testing because of the early-20th-century chemical re-dyeing process — the burgundy is often unstable and needs gentle handling. Antique pre-1910 Sarouks and Mohajerans receive the antique wash. Sun-faded or color-bled American Sarouks are excellent candidates for our color restoration service. Full Persian process on our Persian rug cleaning page.

From Our Clients

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.
MH
Maria H.
Bedford, NY
A 1920s Heriz I thought was beyond saving came back better than the day my parents bought it.
JB
Jonathan B.
Short Hills, NJ
Our clients trust us with eight-figure homes. Horizon is the only atelier I send their rugs to.
EV
Elena V.
Greenwich, CT · Interior Designer
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American, Mohajeran, antique pre-1910, or workshop — whichever Sarouk you own, we hand-wash with the process appropriate to its construction. Complimentary pickup from Manhattan, the Hamptons, Westchester, Greenwich, and Stamford.

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