Several artforms in different parts of the Islamic world make use of geometric patterns. These include ceramics, Thus an unglazed earthenware water flask from
Aleppo in the shape of a vertical circle (with handles and neck above) is decorated with a ring of moulded braiding around an Arabic inscription with a small 8-petalled flower at the centre.
Girih tilings and woodwork Girih are elaborate interlacing patterns formed of five standardized shapes. The style is used in
Persian Islamic architecture and also in decorative woodwork. Girih designs are traditionally made in different media including cut brickwork,
stucco, and mosaic
faience tilework. In woodwork, especially in the
Safavid period, it could be applied either as lattice frames, left plain or inset with panels such as of coloured glass; or as mosaic panels used to decorate walls and ceilings, whether sacred or secular. In architecture, girih forms decorative interlaced strapwork surfaces from the 15th century to the 20th century. Most designs are based on a partially hidden geometric grid which provides a regular array of points; this is made into a pattern using 2-, 3-, 4-, and 6-fold rotational symmetries which can fill the plane. The visible pattern superimposed on the grid is also geometric, with 6-, 8-, 10- and 12-pointed stars and a variety of convex polygons, joined by straps which typically seem to weave over and under each other. The visible pattern does not coincide with the underlying construction lines of the tiling.
Jali : window with girih-style 10-point stars (at rear), with floral roundels in octagons forming a frieze at front Jali are pierced stone screens with regularly repeating patterns. They are characteristic of
Indo-Islamic architecture, for example in the
Mughal dynasty buildings at
Fatehpur Sikri and the
Taj Mahal. The geometric designs combine polygons such as octagons and pentagons with other shapes such as 5- and 8-pointed stars. The patterns emphasized symmetries and suggested infinity by repetition. Jali functioned as windows or room dividers, providing privacy but allowing in air and light. Jali forms a prominent element of the architecture of India. The use of perforated walls has declined with modern building standards and the need for security. Modern, simplified jali walls, for example made with pre-moulded clay or cement blocks, have been popularised by the architect Laurie Baker. Pierced windows in girih style are sometimes found elsewhere in the Islamic world, such as in windows of the
Mosque of Ibn Tulun in Cairo.
Kilim such as the
Wolf's Mouth (Kurt Aǧzi), to protect the flocks against wolves, are often woven into tribal
kilims. A kilim is an Islamic flatwoven carpet (without a pile), whether for household use or a
prayer mat. The pattern is made by winding the
weft threads back over the
warp threads when a colour boundary is reached. This technique leaves a gap or vertical slit, so kilims are sometimes called slit-woven textiles. Kilims are often decorated with geometric patterns with 2- or 4-fold mirror or rotational symmetries. Because weaving uses vertical and horizontal threads, curves are difficult to generate, and patterns are accordingly formed mainly with straight edges. Kilim patterns are often characteristic of specific regions.
Kilim motifs are often symbolic as well as decorative. For example, the wolf's mouth or wolf's foot motif (Turkish: Kurt Aǧzi, Kurt İzi) expresses the tribal weavers' desires for protection of their families' flocks from
wolves.
Leather Islamic leather is often embossed with patterns similar to those already described. Leather book covers, starting with the
Quran where figurative artwork was excluded, were decorated with a combination of kufic script, medallions and geometric patterns, typically bordered by geometric
braiding.
Metalwork Metal artefacts share the same geometric designs that are used in other forms of Islamic art. However, in the view of
Hamilton Gibb, the emphasis differs: geometric patterns tend to be used for borders, and if they are in the main decorative area they are most often used in combination with other motifs such as floral designs, arabesques, animal motifs, or calligraphic script. Geometric designs in Islamic metalwork can form a grid decorated with these other motifs, or they can form the background pattern. Even where metal objects such as bowls and dishes do not seem to have geometric decoration, still the designs, such as arabesques, are often set in octagonal compartments or arranged in concentric bands around the object. Both closed designs (which do not repeat) and open or repetitive patterns are used. Patterns such as interlaced six-pointed stars were especially popular from the 12th century.
Eva Baer notes that while this design was essentially simple, it was elaborated by metalworkers into intricate patterns interlaced with arabesques, sometimes organised around further basic Islamic patterns, such as the hexagonal pattern of six overlapping circles.
Muqarnas Muqarnas are elaborately carved ceilings to
semi-domes, often used in mosques. They are typically made of stucco (and thus do not have a structural function), but can also be of wood, brick, and stone. They are characteristic of Islamic architecture of the Middle Ages from Spain and Morocco in the west to Persia in the east. Architecturally they form multiple tiers of
squinches, diminishing in size as they rise. They are often elaborately decorated.
Stained glass Geometrically patterned
stained glass is used in a variety of settings in Islamic architecture. It is found in the surviving summer residence of the
Palace of Shaki Khans,
Azerbaijan, constructed in 1797. Patterns in the
"shabaka" windows include 6-, 8-, and 12-point stars. These wood-framed decorative windows are distinctive features of the palace's architecture. Shabaka are still constructed the traditional way in
Sheki in the 21st century. Traditions of stained glass set in wooden frames (not lead as in Europe) survive in workshops in Iran as well as Azerbaijan. Glazed windows set in stucco arranged in girih-like patterns are found both in Turkey and the Arab lands; a late example, without the traditional balance of design elements, was made in Tunisia for the International Colonial Exhibition in Amsterdam in 1883. The old city of
Sana'a in Yemen has stained glass windows in its tall buildings.
Zellij Zellij () is geometric tilework with glazed terracotta tiles set into plaster, forming colourful mosaic patterns including regular and semiregular
tessellations. The tradition is characteristic of
Morocco, but is also found in Moorish Spain.
Zellij is used to decorate mosques, public buildings and wealthy private houses.
Illustrations File:Persia p1070299.jpg|alt=Decoratively patterned ceramic bowl from Persia|
Safavid bowl with radial and circular motifs, Persia, 17th century File:Lustre tiles Iran Sufi divine breath shapes.JPG|
Lustre tiles from Iran, probably
Kashan, 1262, in the shapes of the
Sufi symbols for the divine breath File:Samarkand Shah-i Zinda Tuman Aqa complex cropped2.jpg|alt=Complicated strapwork tiling|Glazed tilework
Girih at
Shah-i-Zinda in
Samarkand,
Uzbekistan File:Side of a Minbar.jpg|alt=Finely carved Islamic wooden pulpit|Side of a wooden
Minbar (pulpit) with 12-point stars. 14th century.
Turkish and Islamic Arts Museum File:Salim Chishti Tomb-2.jpg|alt=Indian pierced stone screens|
Jali pierced stone screens at the tomb of
Salim Chishti,
Fatehpur Sikri,
India File:Vintage Turkish Kilim Geometric Patterned Rug.jpg|alt=Simple geometric patterns on a flatweave rug|Woven wool
Kilim from Turkey File:'Ali ibn Abi Talib - Prayer Book - Walters W579 - Closed Top View A.jpg|alt=Finely worked leather bookbinding|Leather prayer book cover, Persia, 16th century File:Kairo Rifai Moschee BW 5.jpg|alt=Iron gate from Egypt, forming a pattern of stars and kites|Iron gate with 10-point stars and
kites at
Al-Rifa'i Mosque, Cairo (1869–1912) File:Flickr - Gaspa - Cairo, madrasa di Hasan (12).jpg|alt=Bronze doors from Egypt, decorated with strapwork|Detail of
bronze door,
Mosque-Madrassa of Sultan Hassan,
Cairo, decorated with strapwork File:Isfahan Royal Mosque entrance.JPG|alt=Elaborate stepped vaulting in Iran|
Muqarnas in
Shah Mosque,
Isfahan,
Iran File:Shaki khan palace 1.jpg|alt=Colourful stained glass patterns from Azerbaijan|Geometric
shabaka stained glass in the 1797
Palace of Shaki Khans,
Azerbaijan File:Traditional Window, Sana'a (11024852966).jpg|Traditional Window,
Sana'a,
Yemen File:Mekhnes Place El-Hedine Mosaique.jpg|alt=Decorative brightly coloured tiling in Morocco|Glazed tile
Zellij at Place el-Hedim in
Meknes,
Morocco ==Outside Islamic art==