Carrying the warmth and botanical generosity of the French Savonnerie tradition, this hand-knotted Aubusson rug presents a design that feels as though it was drawn directly from a sunlit garden and translated onto an ivory wool ground with complete fidelity. The rug features a luminous cream ivory field covered in a freely moving vine composition, where slender green stems curl and branch across the open ground into marigold gold chrysanthemums and boldly serrated sage leaves of varying scale, the whole arrangement unfolding without a central anchor point in a naturalistic, all-directional layout that gives the design a relaxed, organic energy rarely found in more formally structured Aubusson work. The blooms themselves are rendered with a flatness and simplicity that is entirely intentional, their clean outlines and unshaded forms reflecting the Savonnerie design sensibility of bold botanical statement. A warm gold border carries the same vine and flower motif in a tighter, more contained register, framed by a thin aqua inner guard that draws a clean boundary between the field's open ivory ground and the richness of the gold outer band. The plush pile gives the gold and green considerable depth and saturation, each color retaining its distinctness against the ivory with a clarity that speaks to the quality of the dye work throughout. Hand-knotted in wool on a cotton foundation, this is a cheerful and beautifully resolved rug.
- Exact Size: 4x6
- Weave: Hand Knotted Rug
- Yarn: Wool
- Color: Ivory, Gold, Green, Multi
- Origin: India
- Pile Height: 1 inch
- Condition: New
- Condition Description: New With Tags
- Rug#: ORH20433
Story Behind the Art: French needlepoint rugs originated in 17th–18th century France, famously crafted in Aubusson and Savonnerie workshops for royal and aristocratic interiors. Featuring floral medallions and elegant scrollwork, they were hand-stitched onto canvas using fine petit and gros point techniques. These rugs were heavily influenced by classical European art, featuring floral medallions, scrollwork, garlands, and pastel palettes. They were often used in palaces, châteaux, and salons, woven with meticulous craftsmanship using the petit point and gros point techniques. By the late 20th century, China became a major producer of French-style needlepoint rugs. Using centuries-old weaving and embroidery skills, Chinese artisans began replicating Aubusson and Savonnerie designs on a global scale. These rugs are hand-stitched or handwoven, often using wool on cotton canvas, and maintain the look of antique French originals at more accessible price points.