Iranian carpet weavers have completed the world's largest carpet in the city of Neishabour, northeast Iran. The carpet was brought down in separate pieces from the looms last Friday and was displayed at a special ceremony, attended by local officials. The carpet measures 6,000 square meters, contains over 2 billion knots and has been woven by using 35,000 kgs of wool and 12,000 kgs of cotton. It took a year to finish. The design of the carpet is called 'Toranj Afshan' -- a composition of flowers, leaves, branches and plants scattered in different directions. The project was launched upon an order by the United Arab Emirates and Iran's Carpet Company in Neishabour. It was woven on nine separate looms and will be attached together in the Sheikh Zayed Mosque in Abu Dhabi, the United Arab Emirates. It took 1,200 weavers to complete the carpet whose value is estimated to be $8.5 million. The Persian carpet is one of the most distinguishable manifestations of Persian art and culture, renowned for their richness of color, variety of patterns and quality of design.