The Japan Times - 'Woven air': Bangladesh revives elite forgotten fabric

EUR -
AED 4.174583
AFN 81.265494
ALL 98.990193
AMD 443.627018
ANG 2.048382
AOA 1042.777453
ARS 1327.757682
AUD 1.776117
AWG 2.045779
AZN 1.928442
BAM 1.95734
BBD 2.294735
BDT 138.084696
BGN 1.955185
BHD 0.428345
BIF 3332.347113
BMD 1.136544
BND 1.493803
BOB 7.853281
BRL 6.464099
BSD 1.136509
BTN 97.015595
BWP 15.66553
BYN 3.719046
BYR 22276.263105
BZD 2.282926
CAD 1.575988
CDF 3269.83715
CHF 0.942083
CLF 0.027714
CLP 1063.521235
CNY 8.282797
CNH 8.285866
COP 4796.102177
CRC 575.260107
CUC 1.136544
CUP 30.118417
CVE 110.588181
CZK 24.968163
DJF 201.986513
DKK 7.465731
DOP 67.112758
DZD 150.468199
EGP 57.893252
ERN 17.048161
ETB 149.004127
FJD 2.56626
FKP 0.853603
GBP 0.854056
GEL 3.114568
GGP 0.853603
GHS 17.400861
GIP 0.853603
GMD 81.831401
GNF 9836.788463
GTQ 8.753001
GYD 237.772268
HKD 8.816456
HNL 29.321042
HRK 7.535625
HTG 148.403267
HUF 406.246467
IDR 19128.036125
ILS 4.117134
IMP 0.853603
INR 97.043983
IQD 1488.872687
IRR 47848.504311
ISK 145.283925
JEP 0.853603
JMD 179.861484
JOD 0.805926
JPY 163.204349
KES 147.012477
KGS 99.391002
KHR 4564.360408
KMF 491.554324
KPW 1022.889618
KRW 1634.759775
KWD 0.348634
KYD 0.947057
KZT 585.208064
LAK 24577.764772
LBP 101690.255668
LKR 340.541399
LRD 227.301802
LSL 21.224954
LTL 3.355919
LVL 0.687484
LYD 6.211216
MAD 10.518699
MDL 19.615689
MGA 5128.652067
MKD 61.491394
MMK 2386.329869
MNT 4060.845389
MOP 9.080263
MRU 44.984501
MUR 51.519607
MVR 17.514235
MWK 1970.693549
MXN 22.229619
MYR 4.971192
MZN 72.73869
NAD 21.230938
NGN 1826.34693
NIO 41.823451
NOK 11.825036
NPR 155.222419
NZD 1.907914
OMR 0.43706
PAB 1.136509
PEN 4.170545
PGK 4.606478
PHP 63.862664
PKR 319.31192
PLN 4.273492
PYG 9090.791122
QAR 4.138137
RON 4.976256
RSD 117.561785
RUB 93.866437
RWF 1609.346355
SAR 4.263106
SBD 9.495044
SCR 16.138556
SDG 682.501614
SEK 11.019817
SGD 1.494324
SHP 0.893145
SLE 25.797627
SLL 23832.741707
SOS 649.527804
SRD 41.916857
STD 23524.166871
SVC 9.943428
SYP 14777.180499
SZL 21.231131
THB 38.108097
TJS 12.024223
TMT 3.98927
TND 3.405039
TOP 2.661895
TRY 43.586006
TTD 7.720175
TWD 36.976345
TZS 3057.303958
UAH 47.529024
UGX 4166.112224
USD 1.136544
UYU 47.445861
UZS 14718.244853
VES 94.687666
VND 29574.580632
VUV 137.046537
WST 3.141384
XAF 656.487851
XAG 0.034334
XAU 0.000342
XCD 3.071568
XDR 0.817126
XOF 654.084369
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.565181
ZAR 21.281788
ZMK 10230.257101
ZMW 31.736384
ZWL 365.966716
  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.46

    +0.04%

  • SCS

    -0.0600

    9.89

    -0.61%

  • NGG

    -0.2200

    72.04

    -0.31%

  • BCC

    -0.5800

    95.51

    -0.61%

  • BCE

    -0.3600

    21.65

    -1.66%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    22.33

    -0%

  • BTI

    -0.4000

    42.05

    -0.95%

  • BP

    0.1900

    29.19

    +0.65%

  • JRI

    0.1400

    12.74

    +1.1%

  • RIO

    -1.1300

    60.56

    -1.87%

  • GSK

    -0.0700

    37.43

    -0.19%

  • RBGPF

    60.8800

    60.88

    +100%

  • RYCEF

    0.0100

    10.16

    +0.1%

  • RELX

    0.3800

    53.55

    +0.71%

  • AZN

    0.0200

    69.57

    +0.03%

  • VOD

    0.0400

    9.35

    +0.43%

'Woven air': Bangladesh revives elite forgotten fabric
'Woven air': Bangladesh revives elite forgotten fabric

'Woven air': Bangladesh revives elite forgotten fabric

With wooden spinning wheels and hand-drawn looms, Bangladesh is painstakingly resurrecting a fabric once worn by Marie Antoinette and Jane Austen but long thought forever lost to history.

Text size:

Dhaka muslin was stitched from threads so fine that popular folklore in European parlours held that a change in the light or a sudden rain shower would render its wearer apparently naked.

The textile once brought magnificent riches to the lands where it was spun.

But to revive it, botanists had to hunt halfway across the world and back for a plant believed gone from the face of the earth.

"Nobody knew how it was made," said Ayub Ali, a senior government official helping shepherd the revival project.

"We lost the famous cotton plant, which provided the special fine yarn for Dhaka muslin," he told AFP.

The muslin trade at one time helped turn the Ganges delta and what is now Bangladesh into one of the most prosperous parts of the world, historians say.

Flowing dress garments weaved from the cloth were worn by generations of the Mughal dynasty then ruling India before the fabric enchanted European aristocrats and other notables at the end of the 18th century.

A muslin shawl belonging to Austen -- supposedly hand-embroidered by the "Pride and Prejudice" author herself -- is on display at her former home in Hampshire, while a 1783 portrait of Marie Antoinette depicts the French queen in a muslin dress.

But the industry collapsed in the years after the 18th century conquest of the Bengal delta by the East India Company, paving the way for British colonial rule.

The mills and factories that sprung up in England after the industrial revolution produced much cheaper textiles, while European tariffs killed the foreign market for the delicate fabric.

- 'Rare and possibly extinct' -

The quest to bring back Bangladeshi muslin began with a painstaking five-year search for the specific flower used to weave the fabric, which only grows near the capital Dhaka.

"Muslin can't be woven without Phuti Carpus cotton. So to revive Dhaka Muslin, we needed to find this rare and possibly extinct cotton plant," said Monzur Hossain, the botanist who led the effort.

His team consulted a seminal book on plants by the 18th century Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus along with a later historical tome on Dhaka muslin to narrow down a candidate among 39 different wild species collected from around Bangladesh.

With local museums lacking any specimen of Dhaka muslin clothing, Hossain and his colleagues went to India, Egypt and Britain for samples.

At the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, curators showed them hundreds of pieces imported from Mughal-era Dhaka by East India Company merchants.

Genetic samples revealed that the missing plant was already in their hands, found by the botanists in the riverside town of Kapasia north of the capital.

"It was a 100 percent match, and some history books say Kapasia was one of the places where Phuti Carpus was grown," Hossain told AFP.

The plant is now being grown in experimental farms in an effort to raise yields and scale up production.

- 'Like doing prayers' -

But the revival project immediately ran into another roadblock -- finding weavers nimble enough to weave the plant's ultra-fine threads.

In the two centuries since the muslin trade collapsed, Bangladesh has again become a world textile hub, albeit with an industry no longer catering to royalty or other international elites.

Instead Dhaka is now home to countless bustling factories of the global fast fashion trade, supplying huge brands such as H&M and Walmart, with its $35 billion in yearly apparel exports second only to China.

The country has no shortage of garment workers, but the muslin project needed to source artisans from the small cottage industry of spinners and weavers working with fragile threads.

They found candidates from villages around Dhaka where small workshops make intricate saris from jamdari, a fine cotton produced in a similar way to muslin.

"I don't how I did it. But it needs supreme concentration," said Mohsina Akhter, one of the spinners brought into the project.

"To do it you have to be in perfect mind. If you are angry or worried, you can't hand spin such a fine yarn."

It took months for the team to master the craft, working with threads four or more times finer than jamdari, with two people taking eight hours of non-stop labour to weave an inch or less of cloth.

"It is like doing prayers. You need to have full concentration. Any lapse will tear up the yarn and set your work backwards," said Abu Taher, a weaver.

"The more I work, the more I wonder how our ancestors wove such a fine clothing. It is almost impossible," he told AFP.

The intense labour needed means that any garments stitched from Dhaka muslin will always remain a boutique product, but the government has found some tentative interest from established industry players.

"We want to make it a top global fashion item. It has a great history," said Parvez Ibrahim, whose family owns a factory supplying global fashion retailers.

"But to bring down cost, we have to speed up the production process. Otherwise, reviving Dhaka muslin won't mean anything," he told AFP.

H.Takahashi--JT