

THE ART OF RESTORATION
Located in the heart of the 8th arrondissement, our private workshop, exclusively dedicated to the art of restoration, rigorously perpetuates the ancestral techniques of Oriental and Persian carpets.
Committed to excellence and respect for your exceptional pieces, we prioritize personalized in-home support for both appraisal and return, combining artisanal expertise and absolute discretion.
Fondée en 1956 par le patriarche M.RENARD.
Aujourd'hui c'est sont petit fils qui dirige la maison M.Mignaton Adrien.
C'est trois générations de passionnés d'Art Orientale, d’Extrême-Orient et de décorations d’intérieur tel que du mobilier Art déco ou moderne, notre passion perdure encore aujourd'hui depuis plus de 65 ans.
Vous y trouverez toutes origines, toutes dimensions tout style que ce soit en laine ou en soie style Ghoum, Nain, Ispahan, Hereke qui proviennent d’Iran, de Russie ou de Turquie etc...
Here on the right is Mr. Mignaton Adrien, grandson of Mr. Renard and currently the director of La Maison De La Perse, in the presence of Mr. Mahyar Monshipour, Iranian boxer and multiple world champion, here on the left.

For all appointment requests, please contact us. We provide international travel services.

10-YEAR WARRANTY
Regarding all restorations

Offices
10 rue de Penthièrve 75008 Paris

Free Quote
Travel by appointment throughout Europe
Excellence in the Service of Heritage
From our private workshop located in the heart of Paris's 8th arrondissement, we perpetuate an ancestral expertise dedicated to the restoration of Oriental and Persian rugs. Each piece is handled with the utmost care, respecting traditional techniques passed down through generations, while also incorporating innovative methods when necessary.

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10 years
EXCEPTIONAL GUARANTEE
A unique assurance on the market, demonstrating our absolute confidence in the quality of our restorations.
100%
ARTISANAL TECHNIQUES
Traditional cleaning and bespoke restoration, without compromising on the authenticity of traditional methods.

100% CUSTOMIZED QUOTE
We understand that every rug tells a unique story. That's why we offer free in-home estimates, allowing for a detailed assessment in your own environment.
Core values of our society
Expertise
A deep knowledge of Oriental and Persian carpets, acquired over the years through rigorous practice and continuous transmission.
Authenticity
Strict adherence to traditional techniques and exclusive use of prestigious and authentic materials.
Transparency
Benefit from free, accurate quotes, clear explanations of our services, and personalized support for your restoration project.
"Restoring an Oriental rug means giving new life to a work of textile art, preserving a heritage, a piece of memory, and honoring the work of the artisans who created it."
Mignaton Adrien
The most expensive carpet in the world is worth
33.76M billions of dollars

Delivered to auction on June 5, 2013 by Sotheby’s on New York Square,
The Clark Sickle-Leaf Carpet, a Persian rug from the beginning of the XVIIth century, renowned for being one of the most beautiful in the world, was exchanged for the astronomical sum of $33.76 million.
This is the highest price ever paid for a collector's rug and an oriental art object sold at auction.
This exceptional piece, which owes its nickname to the American industrialist and senator from Montana William A. Clark(1839-1825) who owned it and its fossil-shaped leaf motifs, was estimated at between 5 and 7 million dollars.
This rug was placed in the sale by the Corcoran Gallery of Art, like 24 others from the 16th and 17th centuries originally from the William A. Clark collection, bequeathed to the institution in 1926.
The previous record for a rug sold at auction was
6.2 million pounds.
This amount was disbursed
in April 2010, in London, at Christie’s,
for a Persian carpet from the mid-17th century.
It was also a record for an Islamic art object sold at auction.
This last carpet had been purchased
For 19,000 euros in 2009 ina private sale of a big Hotel in Germany.
Hearing the news of the astronomical price at which it had been resold, the original seller took legal action against the German auctioneer who had more than underestimated her property.
Trial which she lost.
His late rug actually originally had belonged to the Countess of Behague (1869-1939), great traveler and collector.
It was listed, with an illustration,
In A Survey of Persian Art, a specialized work by Arthur Upham Pope published in 1938.





























