A handwoven wool rug is built to outlast almost everything else in your room — with proper care, ten years and beyond. The good news: “proper care” is far less work than most people fear. Here is the complete routine.
Weekly: a gentle vacuum
Vacuum with low suction and no rotating brush (the beater bar pulls at the fibres). Once a week is plenty. Wool naturally hides dust between its fibres rather than showing it on the surface, which is why wool rugs look cleaner longer than synthetic ones.
Spills: act fast, blot, never rub
- Blot immediately with a dry white cloth or kitchen paper — blot, never rub (rubbing pushes the spill deeper).
- For anything sticky, use a little cold water with a drop of mild soap or wool detergent.
- Work from the outside of the stain inward, then blot dry.
Wool fibres carry natural lanolin, which resists liquid for the first moments — you have a window. Use it.
Every few months: rotate
Rotate the rug 180° every two to three months. This evens out foot traffic and sunlight so the rug ages uniformly. Natural dyes mellow gracefully over years — rotation keeps that mellowing even.
Once or twice a year: fresh air
The old ways work: take the rug outside, shake it, and let it breathe for an afternoon — ideally in shade. Avoid beating a handwoven rug hard; the shake is enough.
Moths: less scary than you think
Wool's natural lanolin makes it less attractive to moths than many fear, and rugs in use — walked on, vacuumed, light-exposed — are rarely troubled. Moths prefer undisturbed darkness. If you store a rug, clean it first, roll it (never fold), wrap it in breathable cotton (never plastic), and add cedar or lavender.
Every couple of years: professional cleaning
If the rug feels genuinely dirty, have it professionally cleaned — choose a cleaner experienced with handwoven wool and natural dyes, and say no to harsh chemical treatments. Never machine-wash or tumble-dry a wool rug.
Two Dariyaa-specific notes
- Creases from shipping disappear on their own within a few days of the rug lying flat.
- A rug pad of natural rubber stops slipping on hard floors and reduces wear — a small investment that extends the rug's life.
That is the whole routine: a weekly vacuum, quick action on spills, a seasonal rotation. Ten minutes here and there, a decade or more of warmth in return.
Questions about a specific stain or situation? Write to care@dariyaa.eu — we answer personally. New to wool rugs? Start with our guide to the three weaving techniques.