Modern Rugs, Contemporary Designs for Today’s Interiors
Hand-Knotted Modern Rugs, Curated by Experts
Modern rugs done right are not a compromise between quality and contemporary design, they’re an expression of both. The pieces in this collection are hand-knotted and hand-loomed in wool, silk, and refined blends, designed with the same compositional intelligence we apply to every antique and vintage rug we handle. Abstract, geometric, tonal, and transitional, each one selected because it works in a real room, not just in a photograph.
Nazmiyal Collection has been operating from our New York City gallery for over 45 years. We know what makes a rug last, what makes it look right, and what separates an honest piece from a well-marketed one. Browse the full collection below, explore by style or size, or let our team put a selection together for you.
“The modern rugs we carry are held to the same standard as our antiques. If the construction isn’t honest — if the materials don’t match what’s described — we don’t carry it. A great modern rug should still look interesting in 40 years.”
— Rodolfo Kashanian, Senior Rug Specialist, Nazmiyal Collection (45 years in the trade)
What Makes a Modern Rug Worth Buying
Modern rugs are newly made rugs — produced in the last few decades — designed with contemporary aesthetics rather than traditional regional motifs. At their best, they bring the same material integrity and compositional intelligence you’d expect from a serious antique: honest construction, premium fiber, and a design that holds up over time. At their worst, they’re machine-made imitations dressed up in marketing language.
At the Nazmiyal Collection, we’ve spent over 45 years handling rugs of every kind — antique Persian carpets, mid-century Scandinavian flatweaves, tribal Moroccan weavings. That depth of experience shapes how we evaluate modern rugs. We’re not looking for what’s trendy. We’re looking for what’s good: material integrity, construction honesty, and design that earns its place in a real room.
This page is built to help you understand what separates a genuinely well-made modern rug from everything else — and to help you find the right piece for your space, whether you browse independently or work with our team directly.
Modern rugs don’t belong to a single design tradition the way antique rugs do. They’re defined instead by how they approach space, color, and surface. Understanding the major design families helps you shop more deliberately — and match the right rug to the right room.
Abstract Modern Rugs
Abstract modern rugs are the closest thing in floor coverings to contemporary art. They use painterly movement, soft transitions between tones, and layered surface texture to create pieces that read as compositions rather than patterns. The best examples work at two scales simultaneously — striking from across the room, rich and interesting up close. They tend to be statement pieces by nature, so they work best in rooms where the furniture is relatively restrained and the rug is invited to lead.
Geometric and Architectural Rugs
Geometric modern rugs bring structure: grids, chevrons, interlocking shapes, strong linear frameworks. Where abstract rugs evoke feeling, geometric rugs define space. They’re exceptionally well-suited to open-plan interiors, modern apartments with clean-lined furniture, and rooms that need visual anchoring without decorative noise. The key quality indicator here is edge precision — the lines in a well-made geometric rug are sharp and consistent, not fuzzy or irregular.
Tonal and Texture-Forward Rugs
Tonal rugs are often the most underestimated category. They appear quiet — sometimes a single color across the whole field — but they do significant work in a room through surface variation, pile direction, and the way they interact with light at different times of day. A well-chosen tonal modern rug in a calm interior is the difference between a room that feels complete and one that feels unfinished. These are also among the most versatile pieces we carry: they pair with almost anything.
Transitional Modern Rugs
Transitional rugs occupy the space between traditional design grammar and contemporary aesthetics. They might draw on a Persian floral layout but render it in muted, modern tones. Or reference a tribal geometric but scale it up and simplify it. They’re especially useful when a room mixes antique furniture with modern architecture — they speak both languages without being either. Jason Nazmiyal calls these “the diplomatic rugs — they rarely start arguments with anything else in the room.”
Minimalist and Solid Modern Rugs
Solid or near-solid modern rugs in premium materials — particularly hand-knotted wool or silk blends — are often the quietest and most sophisticated option in a serious interior. The entire value is in the material, the handle, and the finishing. These are also the category most often faked with inferior fiber: a flat, lifeless solid rug in synthetic material looks very similar in a photograph to a beautifully crafted wool piece. In person, they’re night and day.
Materials and Construction: What Actually Separates Good from Great
This is the section most rug buyers skip — and it’s the one that matters most for long-term satisfaction. A modern rug that looks beautiful in photos can disappoint profoundly in person if the materials aren’t right. Here’s what we evaluate before carrying anything in our collection.
Wool Quality
Wool is the foundation of most quality modern rugs and it varies enormously. Good wool — particularly hand-spun or high-lanolin wool from specific regions — is springy, resilient, and develops a natural luster over time. Lower-quality wool mats down quickly, pills, and goes flat within a few years of use. You can feel the difference immediately: quality wool pushes back against your hand. Flat wool just compresses.
The origin of the wool matters too. Rugs woven in Afghanistan, Nepal, and certain parts of India and Turkey often use higher-quality wool than those produced primarily for the mass market. The provenance isn’t a guarantee, but it’s a useful signal when the listing is transparent about it.
Silk and Silk Blends
Silk adds luster, definition, and a visual depth that wool alone can’t achieve. In a well-executed modern rug, silk is used as a highlight — to make certain design elements catch the light differently — rather than as the primary fiber throughout. Pure silk rugs are extraordinarily beautiful but require more careful placement and handling. Bamboo silk is a common alternative: softer and more affordable, with similar visual sheen, but less durable under heavy foot traffic.
Hand-Knotted vs. Hand-Loomed Construction
Hand-knotted rugs are made by tying individual knots around warp threads — a labor-intensive process that produces exceptional structural integrity and longevity. A high-quality hand-knotted modern rug, properly maintained, can last generations. Hand-loomed rugs are woven on a loom rather than knotted; the process is faster and the results can still be excellent, but the structure is generally less robust over decades of use. Both can be premium products — what matters is that the listing is honest about which you’re buying.
“When I evaluate a modern rug, I start with the back. The foundation tells you everything — how it was made, how long it will last, whether the pile will hold. Buyers rarely think to look there, but that’s where the honesty of the piece lives.”
Pile height affects how a rug feels underfoot, how it performs under furniture, and how it wears over time. Medium pile is generally the most practical for living rooms and dining rooms under heavy use. Very high pile can be luxurious but tends to mat and flatten in high-traffic areas. Very low pile (including flatweaves and kilims) is extremely durable but offers less cushioning. Pile density — how tightly the fibers are packed — matters at least as much as height: a dense medium-pile rug will outperform a sparse high-pile rug in almost every practical metric.
Dye Stability
Color fastness in modern rugs varies widely. Vegetable dyes and high-quality synthetic dyes hold their tone beautifully over decades. Cheaper dyes bleed, fade unevenly, or run when wet. We look for rugs where the color on the back closely matches the front — a significant color difference between pile face and foundation is a sign the dye didn’t fully penetrate, which typically means early fading.
Finishing: Edges, Corners, and Shape
A rug that doesn’t lie flat, has curling corners, or has irregular edges is a finishing problem — and finishing problems rarely improve with time. We check that every rug in our collection lays properly, has clean and secure edge finishing, and holds a consistent shape. These details are invisible in most product photography but immediately obvious when the rug arrives in your home.
How to Choose the Right Modern Rug for Your Room
Most rug-buying mistakes come from the same few sources. Here’s how our team approaches the conversation with every client — whether they’re furnishing a living room in Manhattan or selecting a statement piece for a second home in the Hamptons.
Start with Size — Not Pattern
The single most common mistake is buying a rug that’s too small. An undersized rug makes furniture float, shrinks a room visually, and looks like an afterthought. In a living room, the rug should ideally sit under the front legs of all major seating pieces, or under all legs entirely in smaller configurations. In a dining room, the rug should extend at least 24 inches beyond the table on all sides — enough that chairs remain on the rug when pulled out.
“The most common mistake I see is buying a rug that’s too small. People want to play it safe, but an undersized rug makes a room feel unfinished. When in doubt, go larger — it almost always looks more considered.”
— Jason Nazmiyal, Founder, Nazmiyal Collection
Match the Rug’s Energy to the Room’s Energy
A graphic, high-contrast modern rug in a room full of bold furniture creates competition rather than composition. A quiet, tonal rug in a room with very little going on can feel flat and uninspired. The most successful pairings treat the rug as part of the room’s visual hierarchy — usually as a grounding element that either provides contrast to busy furniture or warmth and texture to a minimal space.
Choose Texture Before Color
Color is the first thing people look at and often the last thing that matters. Texture — the tactile and visual surface quality of the pile — determines how a rug performs in light, how warm or cool it feels in the room, and whether it will continue to interest you after the novelty of the color has faded. We recommend choosing texture and construction first, then finding that quality in the color range that works for your space.
Think About Traffic Honestly
A hand-knotted wool rug in a high-traffic hallway will outlast a silk or bamboo silk piece in the same location by decades. Silk and silk-blend rugs belong in lower-traffic areas — bedrooms, formal sitting rooms, studies. For dining rooms under heavy use, dense wool pile or a durable flatweave is the practical choice. Our team will always steer you toward the right construction for your actual use case, not the most expensive option.
Consider the Light
Natural light transforms how a rug reads in a room. A tonal rug that appears flat in a showroom photograph can become animated and dimensional in a south-facing room with strong afternoon light. Silk highlights catch directional light in ways that change dramatically as the day progresses. If possible, view rugs in the lighting conditions of your actual space — or ask us for photos taken in different light. We’re happy to send them.
Modern Rugs vs. Vintage and Antique Rugs: How to Decide
We carry all three categories — modern, vintage, and antique — and clients often ask how to choose between them. The honest answer is that it depends on what you need the rug to do.
Most predictable — you know exactly what you’re getting
Condition varies; natural wear is part of the appeal
Requires careful evaluation; age introduces variables that demand expertise
Investment character
Premium modern rugs hold value well; exceptional pieces appreciate
Strong vintage pieces have appreciated significantly in recent decades
Highest collectibility; museum-quality pieces are genuinely irreplaceable
Best fit
Crisp modern interiors, clean architectural spaces, buyers who want certainty
Rooms that benefit from character, history, and imperfection
Collectors, serious design rooms, buyers investing in depth and provenance
Decision shortcut
You want control over exactly how the room looks
You want warmth and history without full antique complexity
The rug is the point — everything else decorates around it
If you’re drawn to traditional design language but want something made for contemporary living, Persian rugs — particularly modern Persian-inspired designs — often bridge the gap beautifully. Our team can help you identify pieces that work in either direction.
Featured Modern Rugs from Our Current Collection
These are three pieces from our current inventory that illustrate what we look for — strong design, honest construction, and genuine decorating usefulness.
Artful Composition Elegant Modern Rug #12331
A room-size abstract composition built from layered geometric blocks and warm-to-cool color transitions. This is the kind of rug that leads the room — it sets the palette and the mood rather than responding to them. Works best in a living room where the furniture is relatively restrained and you want the floor to be the statement.
Geometric Modern Contemporary Rug #61153
A clean architectural layout with a neutral ground and structured linework. This rug defines space without competing for attention — ideal for open-plan living areas, home offices, and interiors where the architecture or the furniture is already doing the heavy lifting visually. One of the most versatile pieces in the collection.
Floral Sultanabad Design Area Rug #61136
A transitional piece that draws on the classic Sultanabad floral tradition but renders it in a soft, decorator-friendly modern palette with generous field breathing room. This is the kind of pattern that works in rooms that mix periods — a modern interior with antique furniture, or a traditional room being updated. Strong choice for dining rooms and master bedrooms.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a modern rug exactly?
A modern rug is a newly produced rug designed with contemporary aesthetics — abstract, geometric, tonal, or minimalist — rather than traditional regional motifs. “Modern” refers to the design approach, not a specific weaving technique: modern rugs can be hand-knotted, hand-loomed, or flatwoven. What distinguishes them from vintage or antique rugs is when they were made and how they were designed.
Are modern rugs handmade?
The best ones are. Hand-knotted and hand-loomed modern rugs represent the top tier of the category — they’re made by skilled artisans and can take months or years to complete depending on size and complexity. Mass-market modern rugs are typically machine-made, which is why construction is the first thing we evaluate. Every listing in our collection clearly states whether a rug is hand-knotted, hand-loomed, or flatwoven.
What’s the difference between modern and contemporary rugs?
The terms overlap significantly and are often used interchangeably. In the trade, “contemporary” sometimes implies a broader, more trend-responsive aesthetic — rugs that reflect what’s happening in interior design right now. “Modern” often implies something slightly more structured and deliberately composed. For practical purposes, if you’re searching for either term, you’ll find much of the same inventory. Our 21st century contemporary rugs collection covers pieces that lean more trend-forward.
How do I know if a modern rug is good quality?
Four things to evaluate: the fiber (is it genuine wool, silk, or a stated blend — or is it synthetic?), the construction (hand-knotted or hand-loomed vs. machine-made), the finishing (does it lay flat, are the edges clean, does the shape hold?), and the dye quality (does the color on the back match the front?). In a physical showroom you can assess all four quickly. When buying remotely, honest descriptions and detailed photographs from a trustworthy dealer are essential. We provide both.
What size modern rug should I buy for a living room?
For most living rooms, an 8×10 is the minimum that reads as intentional. A 9×12 or 10×14 is almost always better. The standard guidance is that all front legs of major seating should sit on the rug — ideally all four legs. If you have any doubt about size, come larger rather than smaller. We’re happy to advise based on your specific room dimensions — just reach out.
Do modern rugs work with antique or traditional furniture?
Yes, and often beautifully. A clean, tonal or geometric modern rug can act as a neutral ground that lets older furniture and art read more clearly. The contrast between a crisp modern rug and an antique piece can be more interesting than trying to match periods. Some of the best rooms we’ve ever seen mixed a strong modern rug with genuinely antique furniture. The key is that one element anchors the room — usually the rug — and everything else responds to it.
Can I order a modern rug in a custom size?
In many cases, yes. A number of designs in our collection are available for custom production in specific sizes, proportions, and color adjustments. Lead times and minimums vary by piece. Contact our team and we’ll tell you quickly whether a specific rug or design can be produced to your specifications.
Where are your modern rugs made?
The modern rugs in our collection come primarily from Afghanistan, Nepal, India, and Turkey — regions with deep weaving traditions and access to high-quality wool and skilled artisans. We also carry pieces from other origins when the quality meets our standards. The origin is stated clearly in each listing.
A Note on What We Don’t Carry
We’re often asked what distinguishes our modern rug collection from what you’d find at a large online retailer. The honest answer is selectivity. We don’t carry rugs we wouldn’t put in our own homes or recommend to our most discerning clients. That means no machine-made pieces passed off as handmade, no synthetic fiber dressed up with premium-sounding descriptions, and no designs that look like they were produced to follow a trend rather than outlast one. Our collection is smaller as a result — but every piece in it is there because it’s genuinely good.
Glossary
Hand-knotted: construction method where individual knots are tied around warp threads by hand. The most labor-intensive and structurally durable method. A quality indicator, not a guarantee — execution and materials still determine the result.
Hand-loomed: woven on a loom by hand rather than knotted. Faster to produce than hand-knotted; can be excellent in quality but generally less structurally robust over decades.
Flatweave / kilim: woven construction with no pile — the pattern is created by the weave structure itself. Extremely durable, reversible, and lightweight. A different aesthetic from pile rugs.
Pile: the surface fibers you walk on. Pile height affects feel, performance, and visual texture. Pile density — how tightly packed the fibers are — matters as much as height.
Foundation: the warp and weft structure underneath the pile. Determines structural integrity and how the rug holds its shape over time.
Abrash: natural tonal variation in the dyed fiber, visible as subtle color shifts across the field. Common in hand-dyed rugs; considered a mark of authenticity and character rather than a flaw.
Transitional: a rug that combines traditional design elements with contemporary colors or scale — bridges the aesthetic gap between antique and modern.
Bamboo silk: a plant-based fiber that approximates the visual sheen of silk at a lower cost. More fragile than wool; best in low-traffic settings.
Nazmiyal Collection has been operating from our New York City gallery on East 32nd Street for over 45 years. We ship worldwide and work with clients remotely as readily as we do in person — detailed photographs, honest condition notes, and real expertise are standard, not premium services.
If you’d like help finding the right modern rug for a specific room, call us at (212) 545-8029, visit our NYC showroom, or let our team put a selection together for you. We’ll tell you what works and what doesn’t — based on the room, not a sales target.
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The only ones I'd ever buy rugs from. The best.
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Jeffrey NeumanB
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I bought two gorgeous Serapi rugs from Farhad at Nazmiyal Rugs! Beautiful carpets, fair prices and great service. Very happy customer. Farhad (the sales person) was very patient and gave us great service.
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john haid
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Alen is a gentleman and an expert. Really great to work with.
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Edward Yasuna
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I recently purchased a modern Kandinsky rug from Nazmiyal Auctions. It was just as described, and the director (Farhad) of the auctions had it sent to me quickly and safely. Payment was easy, the rug was reasonably priced, and I highly recommend Nazmiyal Auctions and Antique Rugs. Quality merchandise and first-class service.
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Nicholas Carr
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Had a excellent experience buying a rug in Nazmiyal's 1/18/26 online auction. First, prior to the auction, viewing a number of lots at the 32nd St showroom (I had prepared a list from the online catalog). The staff were great to work with: helpful, knowledgable, honest, and flexible. Second, after placing an online bid and winning the desired item, arranging payment and pickup was simple and straightforward. Everything went seamlessly and the overall experience was educational and fun. Many thanks to Jason and his team.
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Andrea Gared
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Everyone at Naziyal is proffessional, especially Jason and Farhad.
They are knowledgeable, truthful, and true gentlemen. I have sold several rugs through them and will always go to them first, to buy or sell. The best in the business!
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Lori Silverberg
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Jesse Zilberman
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Excellent customer service! Alen was very helpful over the phone and email. The rug we acquired was stunning, and photos do not do it justice. I would definitely work with Alen and team again!
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Rachel Paul
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Jason was incredibly kind and helpful! I work for a small museum that had some rugs we had no information on. Jason responded to us quickly and gave us the information we needed for free! Incredible service, we are super thankful for his help!