Woven in the highlands of Khenifra, this festive cushion carries the same joy that lights up Berber weddings — red for life, green for the land, silver for the baraka that follows the bride.
A Ceremonial Piece, Not a Decorative One
In the Middle Atlas, colors are never chosen by chance. The red and emerald diamonds scattered across this ivory field are the same motifs a Khenifra bride wears on her Handira cape as she steps toward her new home. Each tuft was tied by hand, each sequin sewn on with intention — this pillow is a fragment of that ceremony, preserved in wool.
The Red & Green Diamond Language
The lozenge is the oldest symbol in Amazigh weaving — the feminine eye that protects the household.
Red speaks of vitality, love and the warmth of the hearth;
green evokes the cedar forests of the Atlas and the promise of fertile land.
Together, alternated across ivory wool and crowned with silver sequins, they form the visual poem of a Khenifra celebration.
Details That Reveal Its Origin
- Region: Khenifra – Middle Atlas, Morocco
- Fiber: 100% hand-spun sheep wool on a cotton warp
- Ornaments: Silver-tone sequins hand-stitched one by one
- Technique: Hand-knotted red & green wool tufts combined with flat-woven diamond motifs
- Dimensions: 16 × 16 in (40 × 40 cm) – insert not included
Where This Piece Belongs
Layer it on a linen sofa to bring movement and warmth, rest it on a carved wooden bench in an entryway, or set it against a neutral bed to let the reds and greens sing. During the holiday season, its palette feels instinctively festive — yet it remains timeless, rooted in Berber craft long before any calendar.
One of a kind. Small irregularities in the weave, tufts and sequin placement are signatures of the artisan’s hand, not flaws.
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