Jewel Tone Rugs

Ruby, sapphire, emerald, amethyst. Jewel tone wool rugs in deeply saturated color that commits fully to the palette, handwoven in premium New Zealand wool and available custom to your specifications.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Can I customize the colors?

Yes. Every design is available in custom colorways through our online customizer, or contact our studio for access to over 1,200 wool colors.

What sizes are available?

Every design can be made in any size. Standard sizes are available through the customizer. For exact dimensions or oversized pieces, contact our studio.

How long does shipping take?

Tufted rugs ship in 2 to 3 weeks. Knotted and woven rugs in 5 to 6 weeks. Every rug is handmade to order.

What is the return policy?

Rugs ordered in standard sizes and colorways as shown on our product pages are eligible for return within 14 days of delivery in original condition. Rugs ordered with any customization are final sale.

Do you offer free shipping?

Yes. All rugs ship free worldwide with duties and tariffs included.

Explore More

Jewel tone wool area rugs — deeply saturated ruby, sapphire, emerald, and amethyst tones that commit fully to color in premium New Zealand wool. Handwoven by master artisans in Bhadohi, India. Explore sub-collections: burgundy, teal, purple, blue, and green. Each design is available as shown or customized to your exact specifications.

Jewel Tone Area Rugs: The Case for Saturated Color on the Floor

Jewel tones are the colors of precious stones — the deep, saturated, light-refracting hues that carry both visual weight and genuine beauty. Ruby, sapphire, emerald, amethyst: each is a fully committed color that asks the room around it to respond with equal conviction. On a floor, in premium New Zealand wool, jewel tones achieve their maximum expression: the natural fiber holds deep dye with a dimensional richness that rewards close inspection, and the handwoven pile catches light at different angles to create the same kind of depth and variation that makes a real gemstone more interesting than a photograph of one.

The design case for jewel tones on the floor is specific. A deeply saturated rug grounds a room in a way that no neutral can — it provides visual anchor, creates warmth even before any furniture is placed, and sets a palette direction immediately that the rest of the room can organize around. Rooms with jewel tone rugs don't need much else: the floor does the heavy lifting, and the walls, furniture, and textiles operate in service of that foundation. It's a confident design strategy that produces rooms which are immediately and unmistakably designed.

The Jewel Tone Palette in Jubi's Collection

Jubi's jewel tone collection spans the full rich-color spectrum. In the blue register: the Blue Octagon Link Hand-Knotted Wool Rug brings deep sapphire in hand-knotted construction — maximum durability in a saturated blue that has the depth and presence of the color at its most committed. In the green register: the Gradino Hand-Tufted Wool Rug and Green and Gold Striped Hand-Tufted Wool Rug bring emerald and deep green in geometric and stripe formats. In the red register: the Red Octagon Link Hand-Knotted Wool Runner and Burgundy Round Hand-Tufted Wool Rug bring ruby and deep wine tones in runner and round formats.

In the purple register: the Purple Octagon Link Hand-Knotted Wool Rug brings amethyst in hand-knotted construction. For pattern in jewel tones: the Ripple Hand-Tufted Wool Rug, Quatra Hand-Tufted Wool Rug, Boxstep Fine Grid Hand-Tufted Wool Rug, and Scallop Oval Hand-Tufted Wool Rug bring geometric and organic forms in deeply saturated palettes. The Pink Ombre Hand-Loomed Wool Rug brings jewel-adjacent warmth in a gradient format.

Jewel Tones and the Premium Wool Difference

The reason to buy a jewel tone rug in premium New Zealand wool rather than synthetic is most visible at this end of the color spectrum. Deep, saturated colors in synthetic pile look flat and slightly plasticky — the evenness of the dye and the uniformity of the fiber work against the color's natural complexity. In premium wool, that same depth of color reads as rich and dimensional because the natural variation in fiber diameter and the way wool absorbs dye creates subtle tonal variation across the surface — the difference between a color that has been applied and a color that has been absorbed. Explore individual color sub-collections for the deepest dive: burgundy, teal, purple, blue, and green.