Collection: Galicha - Heritage Rug Traditions of India

Ground with texture. Weave with memory.

Galicha was selected for the house for the way rugs define space through material, pattern, and weight without needing explanation. These weavings carry grounding, history, and domestic presence underfoot.

Galicha offers a deeper way of furnishing a room—through foundation rather than ornament alone. What remains compelling is the interplay of texture, motif, and scale in pieces that hold a space together quietly. These works belong in homes that value rooted interiors, tactile richness, and heritage that begins at the floor.

Galicha gathers rug traditions that begin close to the ground and hold the room through weight, rhythm, pattern, and return. Some are shaped through woven stripe and material density. Some through geometry and ordered field. Others carry image into the rug surface, where drawing, border, and woven ground meet. Across each tradition, the rug is not an afterthought to the room. It is a form of placement — a surface that steadies space through structure, repetition, and daily use.

Within this collection, Kharad, Navalgund, and Warangal rugs each bring a distinct language of making. Kharad holds through woven weight and stripe. Navalgund through geometry, border, and compositional order. Warangal through patterned field, and in some works, through Kalamkari carried into the rug surface. What joins them here is not sameness of style, but a shared role in the home: to ground, to gather, and to give material presence to the floor.

How Galicha Lives

In this collection, Galicha appears through rug traditions that anchor the home in different ways. Some enter through quieter woven structure and underfoot steadiness. Some bring geometry and border into the room with greater visual order. Others deepen the field through Kalamkari image and drawn surface. Across each, the language remains the same: ground held through handwork, pattern shaped through repetition, and a rug made not only to be seen, but to be lived with.

Begin with Galicha

Begin according to how you want the rug to live in your home.

For grounding, weight, and woven presence

Rug traditions that hold the room through material density, stripe, and structure.

For geometry, border, and visual order

Rugs that bring compositional clarity and patterned steadiness into the home.

For image, field, and deeper surface presence

Rugs where Kalamkari and woven ground meet, carrying drawing and memory into daily life.

For homes shaped through material continuity

Works that do more than cover the floor — they anchor the room through rhythm, return, and use.

For a Collected Heritage Home

Galicha gathers rug traditions that hold the room from below — through weight, pattern, image, and the quiet continuity of ground lived with daily.