Pop art legend Andy Warhol may have died 15 years ago but his famous images of soup cans and Marilyn Monroe live on.

Interest in the artist - renowned for design classics including Campbell's Soup Can and celebrity portraits such as Marilyn In Blue and Red Elvis - is at an all-time high.

Now a rare collection of rugs, wall-hangings and silk-screen prints of Warhol designs has been unveiled at Adam Flude Rugs in North Street, Chichester, to commemorate the anniversary of his death in 1987.

The collection is thought to be the world's last supply of Warhol rugs, made by a firm in Denmark.

Warhol is considered one of the most important American artists of the 20th Century but few people know about the rugs.

One of the biggest fans of the rugs is portrait artist and photographer James Potter, who owns two.

Mr Potter, 31, of Chichester, said: "I am fascinated by Warhol's images.

"I am also a painter and a photographer and my speciality is faces, which was a strong factor for Warhol."

The self-trained artist was commissioned to paint a portrait of the Duke of York at Buckingham Palace but did not opt to depict him in pop art style.

Today, the face of Marilyn Monroe, with her canary yellow hair, green eye shadow and ruby red lipstick, adorns Mr Potter's living room floor.

Nearby, two large bright flowers cover the floor of the dining room.

Mr Potter and his wife Tanya's two-year-old twin daughters, Alice and Clara, are big fans of the New Zealand wool rugs.

He said: "There have been the odd spill on them but luckily they clean up quite well."

The collection ranges in price from £45 for an 85cm by 80cm wall-hanging to £699 for a 335cm by 250cm rug.

Husband and wife team Adam and Louise Flude snapped up the rare rugs for the exhibition.

Mrs Flude said: "Lots of customers said they had searched high and low for images like this."

The show coincides with a Warhol exhibition at the Tate Modern gallery in London, which runs until April 1.

The display at Adam Flude Rugs runs until April 20.