![]() |
| "Four Sisters" designed by Christian Corbet (2008), hooked by Joan Foster. |
Rug hooking is both an art and a craft where rugs are made by pulling loops of yarn or fabric through a stiff woven base such as burlap, linen, or rug warp. The loops are pulled through the backing material by using a crochet-type hook mounted in a handle (usually wood) for leverage. In contrast latch-hooking uses a hinged hook to form a knotted pile from short, pre-cut pieces of yarn.
Wool strips ranging in size from 3/32 to 10/32 of an inch (2 to 8 mm) in width are often used to create hooked rugs or wall hangings. These precision strips are usually cut using a mechanical cloth slitter; however, the strips can also be hand-cut or torn. When using the hand-torn technique the rugs are usually done in a primitive motif.
Designs for the rugs are often commercially produced and can be as complex as flowers or animals to as simple as geometrics. Rug-hooking has been popular in North America for at least the past 200 years.
The author William Winthrop Kent believed that the earliest forebears of hooked rugs were the floor mats made in Yorkshire, England during the early part of the 19th century. Workers in weaving mills were allowed to collect thrums, pieces of yarn that ran 9 inches (23 cm) long. These by-products were useless to the mill, and the weavers took them home and pulled the thrums through a backing. The origins of the word thrum are ancient, as Mr. Kent pointed out a reference in Shakespeare's Merry Wives of Windsor. However in the publication "Rag Rug Making" by Jenni Stuart-Anderson, Stuart-Anderson states that the most recent research indicates "...the technique of hooking woolen loops through a base fabric was used by the Vikings, whose families probably brought it to Scotland." To add to this there are sound examples at the Folk Museum in Guernsey, Channel Islands that early rag rugs made in the same manner where produced here off the coast of France as well.
Rug hooking as we know it today may have developed in North America, specifically along the Eastern Seaboard in New England in the United States, the Canadian Maritimes, and Newfoundland and Labrador. In its earliest years, rug hooking was a craft of poverty. The vogue for floor coverings in the United States came about after 1830 when factories produced machine-made carpets for the rich. Poor women began looking through their scrap bags for materials to employ in creating their own home-made floor coverings. Women employed whatever materials they had available. Girls from wealthy families were sent to school to learn embroidery and quilting; fashioning floor rugs and mats was never part of the curriculum. Another sign that hooking was the pastime of the poor is the fact that popular ladies magazines in the 19th century never wrote about rug hooking. It was considered a country craft in the days when the word country, used in this context, was derogatory. Today rug hooking or mat making as it is sometimes referred to has been labeled in Canada as a fine art.
![]() |
| A modern hooked rug from Lebanon, New Hampshire. Rug hooking was originally developed in England as a method of using leftover scraps of cloth. |
The modern preference for using only cut wool strips in hooked rugs originated with Pearl McGown in the 1930s, and may have saved the craft from disappearing in the United States. Mrs. McGown popularized strict guidelines for rug hooking and formalized its study. However the Grenfell Mission had previously and as early as 1916 established the same strict guidelines as structured by Lady Anne Grenfell wife of Sir Wilfred Grenfell as indicated in Paula Laverty's book "Silk Stocking Mats."
![]() |
| My mother-in-law gave me a very old pincushion made with a rug hooking technique. |
Associations and Guilds for rug hookers.
- ATHA, The Association of traditional Hooking Artists
- The International Guild of Handhooking Rugmakers
- The Ottawa Olde Forge Rug Hooking Branch
- Ontario Hooking Craft Guild
- Rug Hooking Guild of New Foundland and Labrador
- Rug Hooking Guild of Nova Scotia
- Les Tapissiers de Saint-Henri
- National Guild of Pearl K. McGown Hookrafters
Schools for rug hookers
Magazines for rug hookers
Designs, Kits and Hand-Dyed Wool
- The Blue Tulip
- Early American Rug Hooking
- Amherst Antiques Folk Art by Sally Van Nuys
- Maine Hooked Rugs, designs and finished rugs only
- Hey Diddle Diddle Woolies
- Simple Folk
- Hooked Treasures
- Le Musée des Maîtres Artisans du Québec
- Textile Museum of Canada
- Canadian Tapestry
- Canadian Museum of Civilization
- Les Trois Pignons: Museum of the hooked rug and the (Cheticamp's) home life
- Economuseum. Spruce Top Rug Hooking Studio
- Lois Morris
- Janet Conner
- Sunnie Andress
- Sandra Brown
- Judith Dallegret
- Deanne Fitzpatrick
- Primitive Rugs by Kari
- Tony Latham & Jocelyn Guindon
- Martina Lesar
- Rachelle LeBlanc
- Michelle Sirois-Silver
Rug Hookers Talk Shop:


