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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Closest cousins to a Sarouk.
Three Persian traditions every Sarouk collector should know.
Kashan
Central Iranian medallion tradition; the workshop counterpart to the Sarouk floral.
Read the Kashan guideHeriz
Northwest village geometric; the architectural cousin to the Sarouk floral.
Read the Heriz guideKerman
Southeastern floral tradition; closest in design language to the Sarouk American-market spray.
Read the Kerman guideLetters 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.”
More from Horizon.
Other ateliers, every service we offer, and the rest of our story — a few directions to explore.
Bring us your Sarouk.
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.
By hand · By the Cohen family · By appointment