Our
Collection
Our collection includes both new and antique
rugs in both Tribal and City designs representing all major and
well known, and some no-so-well-known, rug
regions of Iran such as Tabriz, Heriz, Hamedan, Sarouk, and Naeen.
Among our buyers, we have the privilege of working with the Master Curator
of Iran’s Museum of Rug in Tehran. All our antique and semi-antique
rugs are personally selected and given the vote of authenticity by this
Master Curator. Our new rugs are selected by us personally for their quality,
incredible beauty, and compatibility with American home design. Our
Gallery
Some of the most beautiful Persian rugs are dyed using vegetable dyes. Many
of our semi-antique and antique rugs are among this category and are dyed
using vegetable or organic dyes. They exhibit the true brilliance of vegetable
dyes. Fortunately, the age-old tradition of dying with vegetable dyes, forgotten
for decades, is making a comeback. There is a handful of manufacturer that
are honoring this old tradition and despite the trouble and the higher costs
are strictly using vegetable dyes. We buy directly from one of such manufacturers
and are able to bring to market new rugs dyed with vegetable dyes. You can
search for rugs with organic dyes using our Advanced
Search feature. |
Our
Locations
We
have two retail locations located in Warwick,
NY and in Madison, NJ. Click for contact information and directions.
Warwick
Located in mid Hudson Valley region, and only fifty five miles from New
York City, the Town of Warwick is a beautiful mix of country and urban,
old and new, fresh farm markets and fancy restaurants. Its rural character
with rolling hills and farmland dotted with red barns and gracious old
farmhouses is welcoming a growing downtown with increasingly urban character.
Warwick is home to many artists, local and world renowned, local wineries,
antique shops, beautiful horse farms, local ski resorts, Victorian bed
and breakfasts, and of course, Applefest. Read more….
Downtown
Warwick: cute, classy and comfy
The Town
of Warwick, Orange County, NY
Warwick
Valley Chamber of Commerce
Madison
The
Borough of Madison is a small, suburban community in southeast Morris County,
New Jersey, about fifteen miles due west of Times Square.
The earliest settlers of European descent arrived about
1715 and established "Bottle
Hill" at the crossroads of Ridgedale Avenue and Kings Road. Madison's growth
accelerated after the Civil War. The railroad provided good transportation for
its farm produce. Later it made possible the establishment of a flourishing rose
growing industry, still commemorated in Madison's nick-name, The Rose City.
The Morris and Essex Line became one of America's first commuter railroads, attracting
well-to-do families and contributing to the development of "Millionaire's
Row," which stretched from downtown Madison to Morristown.
Madison, with an area of four square miles, has a population of approximately
16,000. The center of Madison's borough government is in the Hartley Dodge Memorial
building, an imposing structure located across King's Road from the railroad
station.
Madison is known as a community with strong educational, cultural and historical
amenities. The Free Public Library of the Borough of Madison is exceptional for
a community of Madison's size and is widely regarded as one of the finest small
community public libraries in New Jersey.
Madison is the home of Drew University and has the Madison-Florham Park Campus
of Fairleigh Dickinson University and the College of St. Elizabeth immediately
adjacent.
Madison is the home of the Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey, the Playwright's
Theater of New Jersey, the Museum of Early Trades and Crafts, and the Adult School
of Chatham, Madison, and Florham Park.
Madison's downtown is a thriving central business district. It is supported by
a Downtown Development Commission and a Downtown Manager. The Madison Civic Commercial
Historic District, which includes much of "downtown" as well as Borough
Hall and the train station, is on the State Register of Historic Places. At any
time there is very little vacant commercial space. In recent years Madison has
become noted for the number and quality of its restaurants.
http://www.rosenet.org
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