This site has limited support for your browser. We recommend switching to Edge, Chrome, Safari, or Firefox.

Jennie Fowler Selects 5 Rugs

The lucky clients of Jennie Fowler benefit from her passion for art, design, and the human experience, together creating beautiful spaces that inspire. We recently asked her to select 5 rugs from our collection and tell us why. We love that Jennie chose 6!

 



J E N N I E ’ S    F A V O R I T E S

 

 

Highly textured rug in gray with delicate olive and rust abstract figures

^ FRACTO in Autumn, by Battilossi

Quiet, but never dull. Beautiful structure softened by organic layers. Stormy gray touched with nature’s delicacy, absolutely gorgeous.

 

Rug with geometric pattern made of fine lines in brown and naturals

^ BOXES in Natural, by Christiane Millinger

This rug changes with perspective—subtle up close, striking from afar. The undyed wool is calming, almost meditative. It brings me back to childhood, driving Matchbox cars across my family's rugs. I usually love the sheen of silk, but this all-wool piece has a quiet elegance, like a drawing in fine lines and whispered tones.


Plush rug in brown and naturals with two large squares made from fine blurred lines

^ SHEKARLOU GABBEH, 4 x 6

“A blur of lines—both disciplined and organic. Geometry softened by time, like structure remembered in a dream.”


Rug with intriguing pattern of concentric squares in brown and blue

^ VARIO 2, by Jan Kath

“Architectural without the noise. Strong lines, subtle rhythm. The concentric pattern pulls you in—quietly captivating.”

 

Large rug with centered folk art pattern, reminiscent of antique stitchery samplers

^ VOLANTE NO. 1, by Jan Kath

“This rug caught me off guard—I didn't expect to love it, but I do. It feels joyful, soft, and quietly uplifting. There's a Scandinavian clarity to it—clean, balanced, a little playful. It evokes quilts, folk art, and something deeper. Like good art, it crosses disciplines. There's always more to see.”

4x6 red multicolor antique rug with intricate pattern of tribal symbolism

^ ANTIQUE QASHQAII SHEKARLU, 4.9 x 7.2

“There's spirit in this piece—you can feel it. The more I look, the deeper I fall into its world: mysterious, rich, and profoundly human. This Shekarlu deserves a home where stories matter—an important library, a place of reverence.”

You may also be interested in: