10 Beautiful Living Room Rugs You Will Want To Have Next Season
Living room rugs are a great way to complement your space, making it look more put together and welcoming. If you’re looking for impressive modern rugs that will make a statement without being overwhelming, discover our collection!
Living on the banks of the Omo river in Southern Ethiopia, you can find the small tribe, Kara. They paint their bodies to prepare for ceremonies combined with the distinctive colorful layers of round necklaces covering all their neck and chest. KARA rug represents these overlapping threads with many beads, creating around spreading pattern made out of hand-tufted Tencel.
SEE MORE: THE MARVELOUS AND INCREDIBLE WORLD OF BRABBU
Trees have been venerated since immemorial times: they have their roots in the ground and their trunk and branches extended towards the sky. This concept is found in many of the world’s religions as the tree that links the underworld and the Earth and holds up the Heavens, inspiring BYSCAINE rug.
Himba is a southern Angola tribe, who lives in a land isolated by deserts and mountains and dresses in strictly traditional ways. Himba is famous for their beautiful women painted with ochre and long tresses wrapped in red clay. Inspired by it, HIMBA rug was born: a strong, powerful, red-colored rug made from hand-knotted thin wool, taking to your home the warm sensations of Africa.
Under the Eurasian plate lies the highest and the widest sub-aerial active volcano in Europe and Mediterranean Area: the Etna. ETNA rectangular rug is named after this persistent volcano: a hand-tufted Tencel rug that mixes different neutral tones with slight notes of light blue in irregular shapes. The rough pattern depicts a sense of unveiling a mysterious past, hidden by the effect of the dense ashes.
The Yupik are a group of indigenous people from the western, southwestern, and south-central Alaska. Traditionally, the families spent spring and summer time at fish camp, and then joined with others at village sites for the winter. Many families still harvest the traditional subsistence resources, especially salmon and seal. The travel to search for food and the resistance to the cold weather of this people are represented on the YUPIK hand-tufted dyed wool rug, like the routes that they have taken for all these years.
The Gobi, classified as a cold desert, is known for its hardest arid conditions and is the largest and driest desert on Asia, bounded by Mongolian and Chinese mountain to all sides. GOBI rectangular hand-tufted Tencel rug depicts the extreme and opposite conditions that occur in this desert, fitting well in a sober but strong ambiance.
The Bemba are named after animals or natural organisms mainly in the provinces of Zambia. Their many legends and histories intertwine and cross generations, like BEMBA rug with its many lines, meaning the different ways this clan has evolved through time. In hand-tufted wool, with gray and black colors, this soft rug has been carefully created thinking on the heritage of the tribe to give a smooth and special touch to every space.
The Wariwere is a Middle Horizon civilization that flourished in the south-central Andes and coastal area of modern-day Peru. Known by their architectural works and innovations in road networks and terrace fields, which inspired the Inca Empire structures, they are also now the inspiration for WARI Rug. Intended to honor the innovative spirit of these people, WARI is a living room rug that easily adapts to a contemporary, mid-century or modern home décor.
The Macushi are a population living in the borderlands of southern Guyana, northern Brazil and in an eastern part of Venezuela. In their legends, the Macushi people are believed to be descendants of the sun’s children who created fire, as well as diseases, and they also believe they discovered the Tree of Life. These ancestral family bonds and religious beliefs are depicted by BRABBU’s MACUSHI wool rug, that with its delicate flower patterns and sand hues will be perfect to decorate a family space in any modern home decor.
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The Nilotic pastoralist ethnic group Mursi from southwestern Ethiopia has a strong belief in a higher force coming from the sky. They also consider clays sacred and powerful, as they still paint their bodies for religious and medical purposes. Plus, animals are a very important source for food. The combination of the body painting motifs and the animal’s footprints in an abstract pattern creates MURSI hand-tufted Tencel rug, an earth-to-earth acquisition for the home.
Which are your favorite living room rugs from our selection?
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