About Us
My name is Mir, and Mir’s Nomadic Looms began as a result of stories I grew up hearing about my grandfather’s home.
His house was home to weathered wood looms, the pungent smell of wool and dye mixed together, and the repetitive hand movements of those making carpets.
He himself was not a weaver, but his home played its part in keeping the craft alive, producing carpets that were not purely for decoration but to be woven into daily life and use.
Within the Baloch culture, a carpet is more than something you place in a room. It is where families sit together, where guests are welcomed, where meals are shared, where prayers are offered, where stories are told, and where life happens.
Mir’s Nomadic Looms is an attempt at carrying that feeling forward.
Our work is rooted in Baloch heritage, nomadic memory, and the patterns, colors, and textures that come from a culture often felt more than explained. Through our carpets, we want to tell stories of land, movement, family, craft, and belonging.
Each piece is a way of preserving where we come from while sharing it with homes beyond our own.