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  2. Bhagalpur sari - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bhagalpur_Sari

    Bhagalpur sari is a silk sari made in Bhagalpur, India. [1] More than a century old, Tussar silk weaving industry in Bhagalpur has about 30,000 handloom weavers working on some 25,000 handlooms. The total value of annual trade is around Rs. 100 crores (one billion), about half of which comes from exports. [2]

  3. Murshidabad silk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murshidabad_silk

    Historically, Bengal was the main silk-weaving center of India. Production of Murshidabad silk began in the 13th century, and foreign traders were attracted to this silk as early as the 17th century. Silk was one of the most important products of the Bengal economy, which enriching the economy of the region. [2]

  4. Shantipur Handloom Industry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shantipur_Handloom_Industry

    Shantipur Handloom Industry, also known Shantipur Handloom Cluster, [1] [2] is a handloom weaving industry in Nadia district of West Bengal. It is one of the foremost handloom centers of India. This handloom industry is world famous for the production of cotton Sari. The two main centers of this industrial zone are Shantipur and Phulia.

  5. Industry in ancient Tamil country - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Industry_in_ancient_Tamil...

    Weaving, pearl fishing, smithy and ship building were some of the prominent industries of the ancient Tamil country. Cotton and silk fabrics from Madurai and Urayur were in great demand; the textiles from these regions were well known for their high quality.

  6. Handloom sari - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Handloom_sari

    In the 2010 census, 4.4 million families were engaged in hand weaving. In December 2011, the handloom industry wove 6.9 billion square metres (74.3 billion square feet) of cloth. The economic policy in India aims to advance the handloom industry from the pre-independence period. The Textile Policy 1985 emphasized the promotion of handloom garments.

  7. Vankar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vankar

    Britain's response was to cut off the thumbs of weavers, break their looms and impose duties on tariffs on Indian cloth, while flooding India and the world with cheaper fabric from the new steam mills of Britain. The arrival of the East India Company, however sounded the death knell for the Indian textile industry. The weavers were forced into ...

  8. Silk weaving in Varanasi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silk_weaving_in_Varanasi

    Weaving is typically done within the household, and most weavers in Varanasi are Momin Ansari Muslims. [1] Many of Varanasi's Muslims belong to a weaver community that is known by the name of Ansari, which means "helper" in Arabic. For generations they have passed on their craft from father to son, hand-weaving silk on room-sized foot-powered ...

  9. Baluchari sari - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baluchari_sari

    Though Bishnupur was always famous for its silk, he invited Akshay Kumar Das, a master weaver of Bishnupur, to his center to learn the technique of jacquard weaving. Sri Das then went back to Bishnupur and worked hard to weave Baluchari on their looms with the financial and moral support of Sri Hanuman Das Sarda of Silk Khadi Seva Mandal.