Maida Serapi Persian Carpet Hand Knotted - Red 8' x 10'
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Description / Maida Serapi Persian Carpet Hand Knotted - Red 8' x 10'
Serapi is a particular subgroup of the Heriz tradition, woven in the same north-west Iranian villages but distinguished by softer drawing, lighter colour, and a more open field than its Heriz cousin. The pieces from this register were prized by late nineteenth-century American collectors for their ability to sit comfortably in lighter, more architectural rooms. The Maida Serapi in front of you continues that tradition.
Two to three weavers in India spent close to four months at the loom. The drawing is squared and read knot by knot from a graphed cartoon, but the geometry is opener than a classical Heriz, with more space around the medallion and softer corner pieces. New Zealand wool takes the warm red the field requires without going harsh, and the pile was lustre-washed after shearing so the surface picks up light gently.
The composition
A stepped medallion in soft red sits on an open field, with ivory corner spandrels and a single restrained guard band in walnut and indigo. The drawing is angular but breathes, the way a Serapi cartoon is supposed to. As the wool ages, the red will warm toward terracotta and the field will settle into the soft, slightly worn quality that distinguishes a serious Serapi from a generic village Heriz.
What you are buying
Antique Serapi carpets in honest condition trade at Christie's, Sotheby's, and Skinner in the range of twenty-five to fifty thousand US dollars when they appear, and the lighter-palette examples are increasingly difficult to source. This is a current weaving on the same upright loom, in the same fibre, with the same Persian-asymmetric knot. The rug appreciates with use rather than depreciating.
The piece in a room
The carpet works in primary lounges, dining rooms, and generous bedrooms. The soft red palette pairs with cream limewash and putty walls, with oak and walnut floors, with brass and oxidised steel, and with linen upholstery. The rug holds confidently against architectural rooms with strong daylight and reads well in spaces that take indirect light.
Conservation
Vacuum weekly without the beater bar. Rotate end-to-end at the change of seasons. Blot spills with absorbent cotton, never rub. A wool conservator should wash the carpet every five to seven years. The piece expects an eighty-to-one-hundred-year service life on this regimen.
Reference
- Medium: hand-knotted wool on cotton foundation
- Construction: Persian asymmetric knot
- Hands: 2-3 weavers, around 4 months
- Pile: 9 mm, lustre washed
- Origin: India
Free shipping across India. Cash on delivery available. Seven-day exchange. The carpet ships crated for storage re-use.
More Information
| Handmade | Yes |
|---|---|
| Color | Red & Rust |
| Life Stage | Adult, Teen |
| Carpet Styles | Country & Floral, Oriental & Persian, Traditional |
| Carpet Weave | Hand Knotted |
| Carpet Material | Wool |
| Recommended Use | Indoor |
| Carpet Shape | Rectangle |
| Collections | Maida Serapi |
| Brand | Rugsville |
Auspicious Placement
Vastu Guidance
Traditional Vastu Shastra recommendations for placing this carpet in your home. Choose based on the room and the corner you wish to ground.
Recommended direction: South-west (stability), or under the seating in the West / North-west.
Earth-tone carpets (red, ochre, terracotta, brown) in the South-west bring stability and grounding energy. Avoid covering the central Brahmasthan (centre) of the room; leave a small bare floor space.
Recommended direction: South-west or West side of the bed.
Soft pastels (cream, dusty rose, sage, blue-grey) work well in bedrooms for restful energy. Avoid bright reds at the head of the bed. Place the carpet so it extends 18–24 inches on each side of the bed.
Recommended direction: West or North-west zone.
Place carpet under the dining table such that all chairs sit on it when pulled out. Earth tones (terracotta, ochre, beige) and floral patterns are auspicious. Avoid black or dark blue under the dining area per Vastu.
Recommended direction: North-east corner of the home or the pooja room itself.
Auspicious colours: maroon, deep red, saffron, ivory, gold-yellow. Wool naturally resists fire risk near diya lamps. Use a small 2'×3' or 3'×5' size — larger carpets are not traditional in pooja spaces. Sit facing East or North while praying.
Recommended direction: Just inside the main door (East or North-facing entrance is ideal).
A small 3'×5' carpet at the entrance brings welcoming energy. Choose warm tones (red, ochre, gold). The carpet should be in good condition — frayed or stained welcome mats are considered inauspicious.
Vastu guidance is traditional and may vary by region and family practice. Consult a Vastu expert for personalised advice.
Maida Serapi Persian Carpet Hand Knotted - Red 8' x 10'
₹129,999