A century-old Kashan with a worn corner where the dining chair has scraped for two decades. A Heriz inherited from a grandmother in New York, now flat against the floor in a Cherry Creek living room with one edge unraveling. A modern hand-knotted Gabbeh chewed by a new puppy in Wash Park. These are the kinds of pieces and the kinds of problems that come through our door from Denver every season. A hand-knotted rug doesn’t fail all at once; it fails in pieces, in places that the average eye misses until the damage has become structural. The question for any Denver homeowner facing it isn’t whether a repair is possible. It almost always is. The question is whether the people doing the work actually understand what they’re working with.
At Kian Rug Company, rug repair in Denver is part of the same practice as buying, selling, cleaning, and appraising handmade rugs. We treat Persian, oriental, tribal, and antique pieces from Denver County every week which means we know how they’re constructed, how they fail in the specific environmental conditions of Denver at 5,280 ft, and what a proper repair looks like for homeowners in Cherry Creek and Country Club, interior designers working across the metro, estate executors handling inherited pieces, and condo residents in LoDo and RiNo with apartment-scale rugs. This page covers the damage types we address, our process from pickup to return, what it costs, and how the timeline works for Denver clients.
Free Rug Repair Assessment in Denver
Send us photos or schedule a complimentary pickup. Honest evaluation, written quote before any work begins no obligation.
Why Denver Residents Choose Specialist Rug Repair
The rug profile in Denver is distinct. Everything from fine persian kashan and isfahan rugs in century-old country club homes, to tribal gabbeh pieces in renovated highlands bungalows, to bokhara and heriz rugs inherited and brought from across the country to denver-area estates. That mix matters because the repair approach for a fine silk Qom is fundamentally different from the approach for a thick tribal Gabbeh, and a generalist carpet repair operation treating them the same is the most common reason repairs fail within a season of completion.
Denver’s combination of dry climate, intense uv at altitude, and the sand-grit carried in from the front range creates a slow abrasive damage pattern that often goes unnoticed until pile loss becomes structurally apparent. We see the downstream of that environment every week foundations that have lost flexibility, dyes that have shifted unevenly across a single rug, pile that compresses but doesn’t spring back. A repair that doesn’t account for the climate of Denver won’t hold; a repair that does will outlast the rest of the rug.
Beyond climate, Denver’s neighborhoods and home types shape what we encounter. From Cherry Creek Shopping District, Larimer Square, City Park, Washington Park, Country Club Historic District through Cherry Creek, Washington Park, Country Club, Hilltop, Park Hill, Lower Highlands (LoHi), Stapleton, Bonnie Brae, Belcaro, Cory-Merrill, Platt Park, and the Denver Tech Center, the rugs we repair come from a small set of recurring contexts: inherited pieces being placed into newly built homes, vintage rugs purchased years ago that are now showing wear from sustained use, antique pieces that have been incorrectly cleaned elsewhere and arrived damaged from the wrong process. Every repair starts with understanding what the rug actually is, where it came from, and what’s realistic to recover.
Types of Rug Damage We Repair for Denver Clients
Most damage that looks severe across the room is treatable when examined closely. Here’s the breakdown of what we address most often for Denver residences, and what the repair actually involves.
Fringe Repair and Fringe Loss in Denver Rugs
Fringe is the most frequently damaged part of any hand-knotted rug, and the most frequently misunderstood. Fringe is not a decorative trim sewn onto the edge it is the actual warp threads of the rug, the vertical foundation around which every row of knots is tied. When fringe shortens, unravels, or disappears, the structural integrity of the rug’s end is directly at risk.
For Denver pieces, fringe repair ranges from simple re-twisting and securing of loose ends, to full re-fringing attaching new fringe material matched to the original in thickness, fiber type (cotton for cotton-foundation rugs, wool for tribal pieces), and color. Where fringe loss has allowed the first rows of pile knots to begin unraveling, we stabilize the foundation before any cosmetic fringe work begins. Treating the symptom without addressing the cause is the most common reason a fringe repair fails within months.
Selvage and Side Cord Repair for Denver Hand-Knotted Rugs
The selvage the overcast edge running the length of the rug is the structural border that prevents weft threads from unraveling laterally. A damaged selvage is a relatively low-cost repair that, ignored, becomes an expensive structural problem. Re-wrapping the edge cords with matching wool or cotton thread in a color that blends with the rug’s border is straightforward work; finding it before the weft starts coming apart is the part that saves money.
Reweaving Holes, Tears, and Pile Loss in Denver Rugs
Reweaving is the most technically demanding form of rug repair. It involves inserting new warp threads where the original are missing, re-tying individual knots in the correct pattern, and matching pile height to the surrounding area. Performed correctly, a rewoven section is effectively invisible to anyone who doesn’t know exactly where to look. The complexity depends on three variables: the size of the damaged area, the rug’s knot density (measured in KPSI knots per square inch), and the intricacy of the pattern in the damaged zone. A hole in a 40-KPSI geometric tribal piece is a faster repair than the matching section in a 200-KPSI curvilinear floral field.
Moth Damage Restoration for Denver Rugs
Moth damage is one of the most destructive and most commonly misidentified forms of rug deterioration. The adult moth doesn’t do the damage it’s the larvae of Tineola bisselliella, the webbing clothes moth, that feed on keratin, the primary structural protein in wool. By the time visible damage appears, an infestation has often been active for months.
In Denver, moth damage presents as bare patches in the pile, fine silk-like webbing in the pile or on the back of the rug, and in severe cases, loss of the foundation threads where larvae have eaten through the warps. Reweaving moth-damaged sections follows the same process as hole repair, but scale can be significantly larger. For Denver pieces, we also strongly recommend pairing restoration with a professional moth-proofing treatment particularly for pieces that will be stored or that sit in lower-traffic rooms.
Pet Damage Repair in Denver Residences
Pet damage takes several forms in the rugs we receive from Denver homes claw damage to pile (often at corners and edges), chewing damage that removes pile, weft, or fringe entirely, and urine saturation that penetrates the foundation. Each form requires reweaving or reconstruction proportional to the fiber loss.
Urine saturation is a separate category and worth a separate note. When urine reaches the foundation, the protein compounds interact chemically with the wool, weakening fibers and accelerating structural breakdown in prolonged exposure. Repair has to be paired with professional cleaning to address the chemical damage before structural work begins a rewoven section placed over contaminated foundation won’t hold long-term. We coordinate these as a combined service for Denver clients to avoid the sequencing problem.
Color Restoration and Dye Touching for Denver Antique Rugs
Color fading is common in rugs exposed to direct sunlight and in pieces previously washed under alkaline conditions. In faded areas, careful dye touching can restore visual uniformity though the process is more art than formula. Results depend on the dye type (natural vs. synthetic), the degree of fading, and the surrounding patina that needs to be respected rather than stripped. We work conservatively: overcorrection is harder to fix than undercorrection, so dye is applied in stages, assessed under natural light, and built up only as needed.
Foundation Stabilization for Antique Denver Rugs
Warping when a rug ripples, buckles, or no longer lies flat is typically a weft tension problem. In moderate cases, blocking (controlled re-tensioning during drying after professional cleaning) resolves the issue without structural repair. In more severe cases, sections of weft need to be replaced to restore even tension. A warped foundation that isn’t addressed accelerates pile wear unevenly and, in antique pieces, can eventually cause crack-through damage along the fold lines.
Our Rug Repair Process for Denver Properties
Every repair begins with an honest assessment. For Denver pieces, we conduct this in one of two ways: an in-person inspection at pickup, where our technician examines the rug at your home before wrapping it for transport, or a detailed photo review for clients who want a preliminary quote before scheduling a pickup. Either way, we don’t quote without seeing the full picture.
Step 1 Assessment and Documentation
A fringe that appears to need simple re-twisting sometimes reveals, on the back, that the first two centimeters of foundation are actively unraveling. That changes the scope and the cost. We identify this before work begins, not after and we document the rug photographically at intake so the before-and-after record is established before any tools touch the piece.
Step 2 Cleaning Before Repair (for Most Denver Pieces)
In most cases, rugs are cleaned before repair rather than after, for two practical reasons. First, a clean rug reveals the true extent of surface damage soil masks pile loss, obscures hole edges, and makes color assessment impossible. Second, repair involves inserting new fiber into an existing structure; if the surrounding pile is heavily soiled, the new material will appear visibly different from the moment it’s placed. The exception is structural emergency cases actively worsening damage that needs immediate stabilization before the rug can safely go through a wash. We assess this at intake.
Step 3 Reweaving and Structural Work
For reweaving, our technicians work on a frame that holds the rug under even tension, matching the original knotting method (Persian/Senneh knot or Turkish/Ghiordes knot depending on the rug’s origin) and tying knots at the original pile height. Row by row, the damaged section is rebuilt from the warp up. For fringe and selvage work, the rug is secured flat and the repair is worked from the edge inward, maintaining even tension along the repaired border.
Step 4 Color Matching, Finishing, and Final Inspection
After structural repair is complete, pile height in the rewoven section is leveled to match the surrounding field, and color is assessed under natural light. Where dye touching is required, it’s applied in stages. Before the rug is returned to Denver, we conduct a final inspection: structural integrity of the repaired area, pile-height consistency, color uniformity, and fringe condition. If anything isn’t at the standard we committed to at intake, it stays until it is. Before-and-after photographs are shared on return useful for insurance documentation and for any future appraisal that references the rug’s restoration history.
Pickup and Service Area for Rug Repair in Denver
Our service area for rug repair in Denver covers ZIP codes 80202–80239, with concentrated service in 80206 (Cherry Creek), 80209, 80210, 80218, and 80220 and the surrounding Denver County communities including Cherry Creek, Washington Park, Country Club, Hilltop, Park Hill, Lower Highlands (LoHi), Stapleton, Bonnie Brae, Belcaro, Cory-Merrill, Platt Park, and the Denver Tech Center. Same-week pickup is standard across the Denver metro area Cherry Creek, Washington Park, Hilltop, and central neighborhoods receive next-day pickup in most cases.
At pickup, our technician rolls and wraps your rug correctly always rolled, never folded; folding stresses warp threads and can crack the foundation in older pieces. The rug travels in a climate-controlled vehicle to our Denver workshop, is logged in with intake photography, and proceeds through assessment and repair on a scheduled basis. You receive updates at key stages, and the repaired rug is returned to your Denver residence on the agreed date.
Not Sure if Your Rug Can Be Saved in Denver?
Send us clear photos the damaged area, the back of the rug, and a full-length shot and we’ll give you an honest preliminary assessment specific to Denver pickup logistics, before you commit to anything. No sales pressure.
Is It Worth Repairing Your Denver Rug? The Honest Answer
This is the most important question in rug repair, and it deserves a direct answer: sometimes yes, sometimes no. The determining factors are the rug’s market value, the cost of the repair, and what you intend to do with the piece afterward.
A genuine antique hand-knotted rug with established provenance a late-19th-century Heriz, a finely knotted Kashan, a Qashqai tribal piece in good condition apart from repairable damage can be worth many times the cost of even an extensive repair. In those cases, repair isn’t just justified; it’s the economically rational choice. A machine-made area rug with a retail value below the cost of the repair is a different calculation entirely. We’ll tell you this honestly at assessment if it applies to your piece.
For inherited rugs or pieces of uncertain origin and value common in Denver estates, we recommend a rug appraisal before deciding on repair. An appraisal gives you a concrete market or insurance value to weigh against the repair quote and removes the guesswork from what is often a significant financial decision.
Timeline for Rug Repair in Denver
Repair timelines vary more than cleaning timelines, because the scope of structural work often isn’t fully known until the assessment is complete and the rug is on the frame. Below is the general framework we work to for Denver clients.
| Repair Type | Estimated Turnaround |
|---|---|
| Fringe repair (standard) | 3–5 business days |
| Selvage / side cord repair | 3–7 business days |
| Small hole or tear (under 4 sq in) | 5–10 business days |
| Moth damage (limited area) | 7–14 business days |
| Large reweaving project | 3–6 weeks |
| Full restoration (antique / multi-area) | 6–12 weeks or more |
Reweaving is hand work, tied knot by knot. A skilled technician working on a fine Persian rug at 200 KPSI ties approximately 100–150 knots per hour under ideal conditions. A four-square-inch repair in such a rug involves roughly 1,200 individual knots a minimum of eight to twelve hours of labor before preparation, framing, and finishing. Denver clients receive a timeline estimate at the assessment stage, and updates if the scope changes after work begins (occasionally the case when cleaning reveals additional damage not visible at pickup).
Pricing for Rug Repair in Denver
Rug repair is priced case-by-case after assessment. There is no meaningful standard rate for reweaving, because knot density, pattern complexity, and damage extent make every project materially different. What we commit to: a written quote before any work begins, and nothing added to the scope without your approval.
The factors that move pricing for Denver repairs:
- Damage type and scope: Fringe and selvage repairs are straightforward; reweaving is priced by the rebuilt area, with a multiplier for knot density and pattern intricacy.
- Knot density (KPSI): Reconstructing one square inch of a 40-KPSI tribal piece is a fraction of the work required for the same area in a 200-KPSI fine Persian.
- Pattern complexity: A geometric border repeat is faster to reconstruct than a curvilinear floral field with irregular color gradations.
- Cleaning combined with repair: Rugs that arrive needing cleaning before or after repair are quoted as a combined service.
- Color matching complexity: Pieces with rare natural dyes or unusual color palettes require more hand-dyeing of wool and longer matching time.
Why Choose Kian Rug Company for Rug Repair in Denver
Rug repair requires knowing what a rug is before deciding how to fix it. The difference between a Persian knot and a Turkish knot changes how a rewoven section is structured. The dye type determines the color-matching approach. The pile height of the surrounding area determines how the new work is leveled. These aren’t details that a generalist carpet repair service tracks they’re the foundation of every decision we make on every rug we touch.
We work with these pieces every day. When a rug comes through our door for repair from Denver or anywhere else in Colorado it’s assessed by the same team that buys, appraises, sells, and cleans handmade rugs, not by a technician who learned rug repair as an add-on to carpet stretching.
We’re also honest about scope. If a repair exceeds what the rug’s value justifies, we’ll say so directly and discuss alternatives. If damage is beyond full restoration but the piece can be stabilized or partially repaired, we present that option clearly. What we don’t do is undertake work without your full understanding of what it involves and what it will cost.
Once restored, protect the work with professional rug storage in Colorado between seasons particularly relevant for Denver pieces in seasonal residences that won’t be in continuous use. And if the piece is heading toward resale, an estate transfer, or an insurance update, a post-repair rug appraisal documents the restoration and establishes current value with the repair factored in.
Frequently Asked Questions: Rug Repair in Denver
Can a badly damaged Persian rug from Denver be repaired?
In most cases, yes the question is whether the repair is structurally feasible and economically justified. Rugs with extensive foundation damage (missing or broken warp threads across large areas) require full reweaving section by section, which is time-intensive but achievable for pieces with meaningful value. Rugs where the foundation has deteriorated across most of the piece may not be candidates for full structural restoration, though stabilization and partial repair are often still possible. We assess each piece individually; there’s no damage type we rule out without examining the rug.
How much does rug repair cost for Denver clients?
Fringe and selvage repairs start at relatively modest rates these are labor-efficient repairs that don’t involve reweaving. Reweaving begins at a per-square-inch rate that varies with knot density and pattern complexity, and can range from straightforward for tribal pieces to significantly higher for fine Persian or silk rugs. We provide a written quote after assessment, before any work begins. There is no charge for the assessment itself, and pickup across Denver is included for cleaning-plus-repair combined orders.
Is it worth repairing an antique rug from a Denver estate?
For a genuine antique a piece with documented age, established provenance, and intact structural value repair almost always makes financial and cultural sense. The cost of expert restoration is typically a fraction of the rug’s market value, and a well-executed repair adds to rather than detracts from the piece’s documentation history. For rugs of uncertain value, we recommend a rug appraisal before deciding, so the decision is based on an actual number rather than a guess.
How long does rug repair take for a Denver pickup?
Fringe and selvage repairs typically take 3–7 business days from arrival at our facility. Small reweaving repairs run 5–14 business days. Large or complex reweaving projects extensive moth damage, multiple damage areas, high-knot-density Persian pieces can take 3–12 weeks depending on scope. Pickup and return travel time from Denver adds 3–10 days depending on route scheduling, with the total turnaround communicated at intake.
Can you match the colors and patterns when reweaving a rug from Denver?
Yes, to a high degree of accuracy. Color matching is done by eye under natural light, using hand-dyed wool selected from our dye library. For rugs with natural vegetable dyes, the match accounts for the natural aging of the surrounding pile. For synthetic-dye pieces, matching is often more precise. The result won’t be perfect under a spectrophotometer, but under normal viewing conditions in a Denver home, a well-executed repair is not visible.
Do you offer pickup and delivery for rug repair across Denver?
Yes. Same-week pickup is standard across the Denver metro area Cherry Creek, Washington Park, Hilltop, and central neighborhoods receive next-day pickup in most cases. Pickup is complimentary for repair orders and combined cleaning-plus-repair orders. A technician arrives at your Denver address, examines the rug, rolls and wraps it properly for transport, and returns it on the agreed completion date. No drop-off required.
What types of rug damage in Denver homes can be repaired?
The full list: fringe loss and damage, selvage and side cord damage, holes and tears in the pile, pile loss and worn areas, moth damage (pile and foundation), pet damage (chewing, clawing, urine saturation), color fading and dye restoration, burn damage where the foundation is intact, and foundation warping. Structural stabilization for fragile antique pieces is also available as a standalone service for pieces not requiring full reweaving.
Schedule Your Free Rug Repair Assessment in Denver
Send us clear photos or schedule a pickup. We’ll assess the damage, provide a written quote, and walk you through the options before any work begins at no cost and no obligation. For pieces of uncertain value, we can include a preliminary appraisal estimate alongside the repair quote so you have the full picture before deciding.
Schedule Your Rug Repair Pickup in Denver Today
Free assessment, written quote, and white-glove pickup across Denver and surrounding areas. Most repairs returned within 2–6 weeks depending on scope.
Kian Rug Company based in Denver, serving Denver and Colorado’s mountain communities with expert rug repair and restoration since the workshop opened. Pickup and delivery available across the Front Range and the Rockies.



