A term used to describe carpet produced in widths wider than six feet. Most carpet sold today is broadloom.
A term originally used to denote carpets wider than six feet. Today carpet is usually 6 foot, 12 foot, or 15 foot wide.
any carpet with a width of more than 1.8 metres.
A traditional term that was used for carpets and rugs that are wider than six feet.
A term used to denote carpet produced in widths wider than 6 feet. Broadloom is usually 12 feet wide, but may also be 13'6" and 15 feet wide.
A term originally used to denote carpet produced in widths wider than six feet. Today carpet comes in 6foot, 12-foot and 15-foot widths.
A seamless carpet of more than 2 metres in width.
Conventional carpeting sold in rolls 6 ft to 12 ft wide.
Carpet manufactured in 12 to 15 foot widths to minimise seaming.
A wide loom for weaving carpeting that is 54-inches or more wide.
Carpet wider than 27 inches -- usually 6, 9, 12, 15, and 18-foot widths, and up to 30 feet in chenille or custom tufted. "Broadloom" is not a type or weave of carpet, nor a pattern or color; it is simply a designation of width.
Carpet manufactured in 3.66m widths (the pre-metric 12 foot width) to minimise seaming.
A term used to denote carpet produced in widths wider than 6 feet. Broadloom is usually 12 feet wide, or 3.66m.