Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
English: Dupatta, Chunari, Chunariya, or Audhani, is a shawl-like scarf, women's traditionally essential clothing from the Indian subcontinent. The dupatta is currently used most commonly as part of the women's shalwar kameez costume, and worn over the kurta and the gharara. This photo was taken in Aziz Super Market in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
Bandhani craft. Bandhani is a type of tie-dye textile decorated by plucking the cloth with the fingernails into many tiny bindings that form a figurative design. [1] Today, most Bandhani making centers are situated in Gujarat, [2] Rajasthan, [1] Sindh, Punjab region [3] and in Tamil Nadu where it is known as Sungudi.
The dupatta (Hindi: दुपट्टा, or chunri (known as odni) is a scarf that is like a shawl and is worn with the gagra and choli. It is also used as part of the women's shalwar kameez costume. It is an evolved form of the Uttariya. Until the early 21st century, the dupatta was the most decorative part of gagra choli, while the rest of ...
The Bangladesh Knitwear Manufacturers and Exporters Association or BKMEA is a national trade organization of Knitwear manufacturers in Bangladesh and is located in Dhaka, Bangladesh. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Member of Parliament Salim Osman is the president of the body. [ 3 ]
Bangladesh Textile Mills Association was established & has been registered in 1983 with the Registrar of Joint Stock Companies as an Association, not for profit, under the Companies Act 1994. It is managed by 27 Board of Directors, 3 vice presidents and one president. [ 5 ]
DBL Group was established in 1991 as Dulal Brothers Limited. [3] The company expanded in the 1994 from a single factory under M. A. Jabbar, managing director of DBL Group who was then a fresh graduate of Computer Science from University of Texas. [5]
Ministry of Textiles and Jute (Bengali: বস্ত্র ও পাট মন্ত্রণালয়, Pronounce: Bostro ō pāṭ Montronaloy) is Bangladesh's ...
Jamdani was originally known as Dhakai (Daccai) named after the city of Dhaka (Dacca), one of many ancient textile weaving centers in Bengal region. [5] Under the Mughal Empire the Persian term Jamdani came to be in popular use, since it was the court language of the Mughals.