Oriental Rug Cleaning: Protecting Investment-Grade Floor Coverings

Oriental Rug Cleaning: Protecting Investment-Grade Floor Coverings

Oriental rugs require specialized cleaning that respects dye stability, fiber type, and construction. Learn what professional oriental rug cleaning involves.

XLinkedInEmail
Simple and clean image showcasing eco-friendly disposable paper cups with minimalist design for mockup.
Photo: Cup of Couple / Pexels

Why Oriental Rugs Require Specialized Cleaning

Oriental rugs encompass a wide range of hand-knotted and hand-woven textiles produced across Central Asia, the Middle East, South Asia, and beyond — Persian, Turkish, Afghan, Pakistani, Indian, and Chinese constructions among them. These rugs are investment-grade items. A well-maintained oriental rug can last generations; poorly handled cleaning can cause irreversible damage within a single service call.

The complexity of oriental rug cleaning arises from three interrelated factors: fiber sensitivity, dye stability, and construction type. Each must be assessed before any cleaning begins.

Young man in white shirt shaving and holding a mirror against a blue background.
Photo: Harrie Oude Hampsink / Pexels

Fiber and Dye Assessment

Most traditional oriental rugs use wool pile on a cotton or wool foundation. Some incorporate silk highlights or all-silk pile. Each fiber type responds differently to chemistry, temperature, and moisture. Wool, as discussed in the context of rug cleaning generally, is a protein fiber sensitive to high alkalinity and heat. Silk is even more delicate and requires a narrow pH range and careful handling to avoid degradation of the luster that defines its appearance.

Dye stability testing is a critical step that should not be skipped. Many older oriental rugs were dyed with natural dyes — vegetable dyes, indigo, madder, pomegranate rind — that can bleed if exposed to excessive moisture or incorrect chemistry. Even newer rugs may use chrome dyes that behave unexpectedly under certain conditions. A professional tests for bleeding in an inconspicuous area before immersion or wet cleaning.

Construction and Fringe

The construction of an oriental rug — pile height, knot density, foundation type — affects how much moisture it can safely absorb and how it must be dried. A thick, tightly knotted Heriz pile holds significantly more water than a flatweave kilim. Drying time and drying position must account for the rug's weight when wet, which can cause distortion if the rug is suspended improperly or dried in a folded state.

Fringe on oriental rugs is typically an extension of the foundation warps — not sewn on separately as with many machine-made rugs. Cleaning the fringe requires care to prevent fiber damage and browning, and the fringe must be straightened before drying so it does not set in a tangled or matted position.

Longo Carpet's Approach to Oriental Rug Cleaning

Longo Carpet's technicians assess each oriental rug before cleaning to determine the appropriate process — whether that is an in-home cleaning using fiber-appropriate chemistry and gentle extraction, or a plant-side cleaning that allows for controlled immersion, thorough rinsing, and flat drying under managed conditions. For rugs of significant value, the plant-side approach is often the more appropriate recommendation, and we communicate that clearly before any work is agreed upon.

Our goal is to return your rug cleaner, brighter, and in better structural condition than when we received it — and to do so in a way that extends its life rather than shortening it.

Dive Deeper Into This Topic

Continue building your understanding with these articles

Why IICRC Certification Matters When Choosing a Carpet Cleaner in Massachusetts

· 3 min read

Water Damage Restoration in Springfield: Acting Fast to Protect Your Property

· 3 min read

Property Management Carpet Cleaning: Building a Maintenance Program That Works

· 3 min read