Four generations of weavers, one workshop. Every repair at Arsh's begins where the original weaver left off — same knot count, same hand-spun wool, same vegetable-dyed palette.
From a single frayed fringe to a full reweave of a hundred-year-old Persian carpet, our master artisans return your rug to sound, beautiful use.
Repair is about stabilization: securing a loose fringe before it unravels further, reinforcing weak edges, closing a small tear, or stopping a worn area from opening. The goal is a sound, safe rug you can put back on the floor — without overworking what's still in good condition.
Restoration goes further. We rebuild missing foundation, reweave lost areas, reconstruct borders, replace lost pile, and visually integrate damage so the rug reads close to its earlier appearance. Reserved for heirloom, antique, and investment-grade pieces where the work is worth the rug.
Most rugs that come through our workshop need one or two of the services below. Heirloom pieces often need several. Every job begins with an in-person evaluation and a written estimate before any work is done.
We inspect fiber, dye stability, knot count, age, and any prior work. You receive a written estimate before anything is touched — repair vs. restoration, scope, and cost are decided together.
Most restorations begin with a cold-water hand wash so we can see the true condition of the pile and foundation. Dirt hides damage; clean wool tells the truth.
Our workshop is staffed by weavers who come from generations of rug-making families. The wool is hand-spun and dyed to match. Every knot is tied the way the original was tied.
Final wash, blocking, and a side-by-side inspection with you before the rug goes home. Pickup and delivery available regionally; insured shipping nationwide.
Arsh's Rugs is a fourth-generation house. We don't subcontract restoration to a general cleaner. The same weavers who manufacture our hand-knotted collections are the ones who restore the rugs that come through our workshop — which means the techniques, materials, and standards are continuous from loom to repair bench.
For investment-grade pieces, this matters. A repair done with the wrong knot count, the wrong fiber, or the wrong dye doesn't just look off — it lowers the value of the rug. Done correctly, restoration preserves both the beauty and the appraised value of a handmade piece for another generation.
Hand-spun wool, vegetable dyes, and silk where the original calls for it. No synthetic substitutes.
Persian, Turkish, and Senneh knots tied at the same density as the original weave.
We recommend the lightest intervention that solves the problem. Over-restoration hurts value.
Every job priced and scoped in writing before work begins. No surprises at pickup.
Cost depends on the type of work, the rug's knot count, and the materials needed. Fringe repair on a standard wool rug starts modestly; a full reweave of a square foot of antique Persian pile is significantly more. Every job receives a written estimate after evaluation — there is no flat rate, because no two rugs age the same way.
Smaller jobs — fringe, edge binding, small holes — typically take two to four weeks. Larger restorations involving reweaving, color matching, or foundation work take six to twelve weeks. Heirloom and antique pieces with extensive damage can take several months. We give you a timeline in writing with your estimate.
Often, yes — especially for hand-knotted wool or silk rugs, antiques, and pieces with sentimental value. We're honest about cases where the cost of restoration exceeds what the rug is worth, and we'll tell you upfront if that's the case. For inherited rugs of uncertain value, we can pair the evaluation with an appraisal.
On well-executed reweaving, no. A correctly matched repair — same knot count, same fiber, same dye — is invisible from the front of the rug. From the back, you can often see the join if you look closely, but that's a sign of an honest repair, not a flaw.
No. In fact, please don't have it cleaned elsewhere first. Most restoration jobs begin with our own hand wash, and we'd rather see the rug in its current state to evaluate it accurately.
Yes — pickup and delivery available regionally. For clients outside our service area, we accept rugs by insured shipping and return them the same way once the work is complete.
Often, yes. Prior repairs done with the wrong materials or technique can usually be carefully removed and redone correctly. We'll evaluate what's salvageable and what needs to be replaced as part of the estimate.
Tell us a little about your rug and what's wrong with it. Include a few clear photos — front, back, and any close-ups of damage — and we'll reply with a written assessment and estimate within two business days.
10-5 pm
Info@arshs.com
(201) 552-2733
