Early one morning, an old couple emerge from a hut, she carrying a gabbeh, a small carpet, that she wove many years ago while waiting for her husband-to-be to carry her on horseback away from her family clan.
As they wash the gabbeh, it comes to life, telling the old woman's story of waiting for marriage.
We join the clan with its sheep, the shearing and spinning and dyeing of wool, and the making of gabbehs.
"All life is color," says her poetic, whimsical uncle; "all life is color," chant the women as one of them gives birth.
With deep focus and landscapes, the film also tells the story of nomadic life.