The Allure of Antique Persian Camelhair Carpets
By Jan David Winitz, President & founder
Claremont Rug Company
PART 1 of 2

Camel head relief detail from Persepolis ruins in southern Persia built by Darius I of the Achaemenid Empire (c. 550–330 BC).
Primarily woven in the villages and encampments of Northwest Persian Azerbaijan and Kurdistan, 19th and turn-of-the 20th-century rugs and runners using undyed camelhair have always had an enthusiastic following among our clients, who find myriad uses for them in their homes.
Many place them in gallery halls or great rooms, as their neutral hues and often more sparse patterns provide an effective counterbalance to the large-scale designs and multi-colored palette of many contemporary paintings. Also, Camelhair’s color spectrum, a surprisingly wide range of earth-tones from blonde to tan, wheat, walnut, and even chocolate brown, effectively lightens and adds distinction to smaller areas or hallways.
As remarkably little can be found about Camelhair rugs in the rug literature, for this article, I am relying primarily on the many interviews with the various tribal elders I was connected to while they were still alive and my experience of working with the rugs themselves over the past almost half-century. I find the best of these rugs extraordinarily intriguing artistically, as the use of this undyed natural fiber amplifies the weavers’ folk-art expression.

Large scale allover pattern, 150-year-old room-size Bakshaish Camelhair carpet provides elemental art in this contemporary space.

Left: Very occasionally a weaver from a tradition that did not use camelhair would explore working with it, exemplified by this refined Caucasian Shirvan Snowflake rug. Right: Two Bakshaish Camelhair carpets create a stirring ambiance in this in collectors’ master bedroom.
Camelhair rugs stem mainly from the villages of Bakshaish, Serab, and Malayer and the weavers of the immense Kurdistan province, including the rugs from the town of Bijar. Weavers from many other Persian and Caucasian styles also occasionally created rugs with precious undyed camelhair. I will delineate some of the distinctive attributes of the major camelhair weaving groups below.
Bakshaish
Top-level 19th-century Bakshaish camelhair carpets are awe-inspiring and incredibly inventive, and just like their all-wool counterparts, are quite hard to find and widely sought after. The oldest ones offer the most spontaneous and elemental rug designs and the softest color palettes.
From this group, those woven before 1870 most often evoke a decidedly tribal context with shield, dragon, and unusual tree patterns. In the fourth quarter of the 19th-century, designs became somewhat more stylized and botanical, with more saturated palettes of color. One of the most memorable Bakshaish formats presents a grand, intentionally asymmetrical central medallion and broad, startling mid-tone blue-toned corner pieces that often contain dragon motifs. Spellbinding camelhair fields with “Tree of Life” or “Garden of Paradise” allover designs are desirable among collectors.

Glistening Bakshaish Camelhair “Garden Carpet”, 7′ 3″ x 9′, circa 1875, reveals tremendous individual detailing in the overall blossom pattern.

Left: Rare Bakshaish runner with sparsely patterned camelhair border distinguishes this passageway. Right: A fanciful, inventive Bakshaish Camelhair “Garden of Paradise” rug is a truly minimalist work of art.
The natural light to rich browns of camelhair combined with Bakshaish’s renowned spontaneously drawn artistry conveys an emotional stratum that is innately familiar and, at the same time, have a “never seen before” quality. Camelhair has this effect in general but seems especially suited to the Bakshaish tradition. One can still find Bakshaish camelhair rugs in area sizes, corridor or runner shapes, room size, or even oversize in quite limited numbers.
Serab
South of Heriz and a bustling carpet market center for all the tribal and village weavings being created in the 19th century in this pocket of Azerbaijan, Serab claims a prominent place in camelhair rug creation. It is the only weaving tradition that used camelhair more often than sheep’s wool for their rugs.
The Serab rugmakers’ particular contribution is the use of camelhair and undyed ivory sheep’s wool to create stunning understated field patterns, much like damask, in a great variety of designs, imbuing a geometric elegance to their weavings. Upon this intricately woven and mesmerizing background, most often single or multiple diamond-shaped medallions float, evoking a sense of quiet grandeur. Serabs are often extraordinarily finely knotted for rugs with geometric designs. For these reasons, our clients choose Serabs as companions in combination with more formal carpets, especially where a runner or gallery carpet is needed. As most town and city weaving centers virtually never wove runners and corridor carpets, elegant Serabs are the natural choice for halls and passageways.

Virtuoso weaving skill created the one-of-a-kind overall patterning in this oversize Serab Camelhair, 10′ 10″ x 16′ 3″, circa 1875.
Celebrating the seemingly endless tonal variations of camelhair, antique Serab rugs and runners are often framed with a wide guard stripe in unadorned camelhair, displaying this fiber’s constant striation of tonalities. In some cases, these areas would reflect the tribal notion of “sprinkling,” where tiny motifs playfully dot the expansive borders.
Serab artisans wove a preponderance of the inspired corridor carpets (i.e., rugs longer than twice their widths, known in the field as “kelegis”), as well as somewhat narrow room sizes. Interestingly, they also occasionally wove sumptuous oversizes and palace-sizes.

Left: Two Serab Camelhair runners end to end unify the nearby art. Right: Camels shed their coats during a 6-8 week moulting season every spring, including about 5 pounds of undercoat fleece used for camelhair carpets.

Highly refined Serab Camelhair, 8’ x 12’, circa 1875 with classical multi-medallion on a delicate latticework field design.
A Bit of History
Camels changed the course of history by the 8th-century B.C. As the historian, S. Frederick Starr, writes in “Lost Enlightenment,” the camel replaced the wheel and the ox-drawn cart in Central Asia. Finding the two-humped Bactrian camel superior to the Dromedary, merchants of the period discovered this animal’s capacity to carry up to 500 pound of goods. As camels are significantly stronger and adaptable to a broader range of climate conditions, they were considerably more valuable than horses. Caravans owned by wealthy merchants could transport the equivalent of a 10-12 car freight train with a mere 1000 camels. Soon the Central Asian desert, traversed by hundreds then thousands of caravans, became the site of the wealthiest cities in the world for several hundred years.
In Part Two, I will continue our tour of the camelhair weaving styles and discuss the tribal people’s high regard for this lanky animal.
View Antique Camelhair Rugs Now Available Here.
Read Part 2:
“The Allure of Antique Persian Camelhair Carpets – Part 2”