Dark Gray Medallion Persian Rug · 1200 Reeds
Selected by our Sacramento showroom team. Designed to anchor luxury living rooms, formal dining areas, and master bedrooms with refined detail and timeless character.
SKU: SR-9121229209824-91x200
Size: 3x6Feet (91x200cm) 2Meters Runner
On every order
256-bit SSL encrypted
Visit in person
Real humans answer fast
Hassle-free returns
Wrapped & protected
Discover the Details
Product Information
01Description
Quiet sophistication — a dove-gray field carrying a finely-rendered medallion in the mid-20th-century Qum silk-influenced tradition, with ivory, cream, soft blue and gentle blush pulls that read luxury without ostentation.
Heritage & Inspiration
The Qum workshops emerged in the early 20th century as a relatively young entrant to the Persian medallion tradition — establishing themselves by adopting silk warp and weft into woolen and wool-on-cotton compositions, raising knot density toward the upper end of hand-knotted production. The Qum aesthetic that resulted reads finer-drawn than Kashan, more pastoral-classical than Tabriz, and more pastel in palette than either. This 1200-reed Turkish translation borrows the Qum drawing register — small-scale medallion ornament, soft chromatic pulls, formal classical composure — and renders it on a dove-gray field that reads contemporary while keeping the Qum DNA legible.
Note: this sibling sits lighter on the dark-gray spectrum than its Heriz-village anchor and its late-Qajar Persian sibling — the ground reads as deep dove rather than slate or charcoal. Choose accordingly if your room needs more gray weight than dove offers.
How It Feels Underfoot
The pile is a 66/34 polypropylene–polyester blend on a premium cotton warp — same construction as the cohort, with a slightly tighter pattern resolution at the medallion's fine drawing. The dove-gray ground carries the cohort's practical advantage (shed fibers and dust disappear into the field), but reflects more light than the heavier slate or charcoal siblings. Plan accordingly: this rug brightens a dim room, where the Heriz-anchor or Late-Qajar Persian variants would absorb more light.
Specifications
- Reed Count: 1200 Reeds (1200 شانه)
- Density: Over 3,000,000 knots per m²
- Pile: 66% Polypropylene + 34% Polyester
- Warp: Premium cotton
- Construction: Machine-woven on Turkish power looms
- Design: Qum-tradition fine-drawn medallion with multi-band classical border
- Color Palette: Dove gray base · ivory · cream · soft blue · blush accents
- Origin: Made in Turkey
- Care: Washable; low-pressure vacuum recommended (no beater bar)
Available Sizes
- 3×6 ft (91×200 cm) — entryway runner, narrow hallway
- 3×10 ft (91×300 cm) — long hallway, galley kitchen runner
- 3×13 ft (91×400 cm) — extended hallway, double-island kitchen
- 5×7.5 ft (150×230 cm) — bedroom anchor under a queen bed, small sitting area
- 6.5×10 ft (200×300 cm) — standard living room with front legs of furniture on the rug
- 8.2×11.5 ft (250×350 cm) — large living or dining room with all furniture on the rug
- 10×13 ft (300×400 cm) — open-concept great room, oversized dining
Styling rule of thumb: Qum fine-drawn medallions reward upper-end sizes (8×10 or 10×13) where the pattern resolution can extend; in a 5×7.5 the small-scale ornament can read busy. Size up if your room allows.
Designer Styling Notes
Choose this Qum-register sibling when you want sophistication without weight — the dove-gray ground sits between cream-warm and charcoal-heavy and supports both directions. Pair with walnut casegoods, ivory linen upholstery, brushed-brass picture frames, and alabaster table lamps for a quiet-luxury read; or with charcoal-velvet seating and aged-brass fixtures for a more modern-classical register. Avoid pairing with industrial-modern fixtures (blackened steel, polished concrete) without at least one warm-traditional element — the Qum medallion's pastoral classicism needs a warm anchor to feel resolved. For pure industrial-modern, the Heriz-village anchor reads more correctly.
Best For
Sophisticated transitional living rooms, master bedrooms, library reading rooms, and formal dining where the floor should read "quiet luxury" rather than "statement piece." Especially well-suited to homes with mixed natural and lamp lighting, walnut casegoods, and ivory or cream textile envelope.
From Our Sacramento Showroom
This Qum-register Dark Gray sibling reads lighter than its Heriz anchor and late-Qajar Persian sibling. If your room sits between dove and charcoal — or you want to compare the three Dark Gray registers side-by-side at our Sacramento showroom — reach out and we'll arrange a viewing. We can also commission a hand-knotted Qum-tradition piece in the same dove palette for formal commissions. Free shipping across the United States and Canada.
Reading the Spec Sheet: Reed Count & Density
Qum-tradition medallion drawing is among the finest-resolution Persian compositions, traditionally rendered on silk warp with very high hand-knot densities. The 1200-reed Turkish translation here holds the small-scale ornament legibly at machine-loom production; at lower reed counts the Qum's drawing register would compress into a generic floral blur and lose the very thing that distinguishes it from Kashan or Tabriz.
شانه (shaneh, "reed count") measures yarn points across the loom's width — 1200 shaneh means 1200 vertical warp threads per meter, the finer end of mill-loom production. تراکم (tarakom, "density") measures how tightly the rows pack along the length. Multiplied together they give total points per square meter; for this 1200-reed Turkish weave that lands in the 1.5–3 million points/m² range depending on the mill's counting convention. Higher reed counts hold finer pattern detail; higher density makes a heavier, more durable rug.
One caveat worth knowing: the same shaneh/tarakom numbers aren't always directly comparable across countries, mills, or fiber types. A 1200-reed Turkish power-loom rug is a different object from a 1200-shaneh hand-knotted Iranian piece, even if the spec line reads the same.
Read the full guide → Reed Count and Density Explained: شانه and تراکم, 500 to 1700 — the complete comparison across all six mill tiers, what each level feels like underfoot, and how to read a spec sheet without being misled.
Origin & Heritage
Modern Persian rugs translate the visual vocabulary of classical Persian weaving — medallions, herati fields, layered borders — into palettes and scale that read as contemporary. The pattern lineage is intact; the colour story is updated for rooms built around oak, linen, brass, and natural light. The result reads as authentic Persian without being period-specific.
How It Feels Underfoot
This piece is built for living, not display. The high-density synthetic pile holds pattern definition cleanly underfoot — medallions and borders read sharp at floor level — and recovers from foot traffic, furniture impressions, and the small accidents of family life. The hand is soft and resilient; the cleaning brief is honest spot-and-vacuum rather than the slow ritual of a hand-knotted wool piece.
Designer Styling Notes
Modern Persian palettes pair beautifully with cerused oak, walnut, antiqued brass, ivory linen, cream bouclé, and matte black metalwork. They sit equally well in a contemporary loft as in a transitional living room — the through-line is restraint in the surrounding palette, letting the rug carry the pattern story while the furniture stays quiet.
Our Curated Selection
Stylish Rugs is a Sacramento showroom at 3423 Watt Avenue — open daily, ten to seven — and the catalogue here is a curated slice of what we carry. We serve the Iranian and Afghan communities of Sacramento and Northern California in person and online, and we source and commission collector pieces on request. If you are looking for a specific size, palette, or hand-knotted commission you do not see listed, call the showroom or message us on WhatsApp and we will let you know what is available now and what we can bring in.
02Materials & Craftsmanship
This piece sits in the easy-care performance family — high-density polypropylene or polyester pile on a cotton foundation, precision machine-woven for sharp pattern definition with hand-finished edges. The construction is purpose-built for family-friendly living: stain-resistant, fade-resistant, low-maintenance, and forgiving of regular vacuuming and spot cleaning.
Patterns are inspired by Persian, Kashan, Tabriz, and Turkmen design vocabularies — reinterpreted in a soft synthetic blend that performs in high-traffic rooms without the maintenance commitment of a hand-knotted wool piece.
03Size Guide
5×7.5 ft (150×230 cm, 3.5 m²) — entry rooms, small bedrooms, and sitting areas.
6.5×10 ft (200×300 cm, 6 m²) — medium living rooms and bedrooms with furniture partially on the rug.
8.2×11.5 ft (250×350 cm, 9 m²) — large living rooms and formal dining rooms (all furniture sitting on the rug).
10×13 ft (300×400 cm, 12 m²) — open floor plans and great rooms.
Styling tip: a rug should extend 18–24 inches beyond the sofa on each side for a balanced look.
04Care Instructions
- Vacuum weekly with the beater bar off to protect the pile
- Blot spills immediately with a clean white cloth (don't rub)
- Rotate the rug 180° every 6 months for even wear
- Professional clean every 12–18 months
- Use a quality rug pad on hardwood for cushion and to extend life
06Shipping & Returns
Free shipping across the USA & Canada. Most orders arrive within 3–5 business days. Canada customers: customs duties or provincial taxes may apply at delivery.
30-day returns on online orders — the item must be unused, in original condition, and in original packaging. Customer pays return shipping. Approved refunds are processed within 3–7 business days.
07Visit Our Sacramento Showroom
See this piece in person at our Sacramento showroom — open every day, 10 AM – 7 PM.
Stylish Rugs & Carpets
3423 Watt Avenue, Sacramento, CA 95821
(916) 890-4077 · info@stylishrugs.us
08Frequently Asked Questions
How long does shipping take?
Free shipping across USA & Canada with most orders arriving in 3–5 business days. Canada customers: customs duties or provincial taxes may apply at delivery.
What is your return policy?
30-day returns on online orders. The item must be unused, in original condition, and in original packaging. Customer pays return shipping. Approved refunds are processed within 3–7 business days.
Can I see this in person before buying?
Yes. Visit our Sacramento showroom at 3423 Watt Avenue, open daily 10 AM–7 PM. Call (916) 890-4077 to confirm availability of a specific piece.
How can I get help choosing the right piece?
Call us at (916) 890-4077, message us on WhatsApp, or visit our Sacramento showroom. We are happy to help you choose the right size, color, and style for your room.
How do I choose the right rug size?
For living rooms, an 8×10 or 9×12 frames the seating area. The rug should extend 18–24 inches beyond the sofa on each side. For dining rooms, choose a rug that extends at least 24 inches beyond the table.
Is this rug machine-made or hand-knotted?
Each product page lists the construction in Specifications. Most pieces are precision machine-woven with hand-finished edges; hand-knotted wool pieces are tagged accordingly and noted in the spec panel. Synthetic and cotton pieces are honest about their material — see the Materials & Craftsmanship panel for this rug.
Do you offer custom rug sizes?
Yes, for most designs. Contact us with your dimensions for a custom quote. Lead time is typically 4–6 weeks.
How should I care for my rug?
Vacuum weekly with the beater bar off, blot spills immediately with a clean white cloth, rotate 180° every 6 months, and have it professionally cleaned every 12–18 months.
More from our showroom
5x7 Rugs
See all →Other rugs in this size
More 9 × 12 rugs
See all →From the Rug Journal
Reading to deepen your choice
All articles →
Guide
Afghan vs Persian Rugs: Tribal Soul vs Classical Refinement
Afghan tribal rugs and Persian classical rugs offer two different kinds of beauty. Here is how their knots,...
Read article →
Guide
Persian vs Turkish Rugs: How to Tell Them Apart and Choose
Persian and Turkish rugs are two distinct traditions. Here is how their knots, motifs, and palettes compare...
Read article →Continue your search
Recently Viewed



