With the highest number of green garment factories in the world, the Bangladesh RMG industry has been leading the world in sustainable garment manufacturing.
Renowned for its strong manufacturing capabilities and thriving ecosystem, the Bangladesh RMG industry has gone from strength to strength and has become a global hub for apparel sourcing. At present, the industry consists of over four thousand factories. RMG exports from Bangladesh includes a wide variety of knitwear & woven garments pr...Read More
In the Middle Ages the European treated Bengal (Bangladesh and West Bengal in India) as the richest country in the Indian Sub-continent to do business with. That’s why the English, French, Portuguese, Dutch, Danes all went to Bangladesh for fortune.
Bangladesh was the only part of India where the nation didn't originated from a tribe. They are a mixed race. Recent research in the West showed that mixed race people are the most talented. That's why Bangladesh produced the first Nobel laureate...Read More
Mughal Bengal emerged as the foremost muslin, the finest silk/cotton fabrics ever produced in the world mainly for royalty, exporter in the world, with Mughal Dhaka as capital of the worldwide muslin trade. During the Roman period Khadi muslin was introduced in Europe and a vast amounts of fabrics were traded to Europe for many centuries. It became highly popular in 18th-century France and eventually spread across much of the Western world. During British colonial rule in the Eighteenth century,...Read More
Jamdani is one the finest textiles of Bengal, produced in Dhaka District, Bangladesh for centuries.
The historic production of Jamdani was patronized by imperial warrants of the Mughal emperors. Under British colonialism, the Bengali jamdani and muslin industries rapidly declined due to colonial import policies favoring industrially manufactured textiles. In more recent years, the production of jamdani has witnessed a revival in Bangladesh.
The traditional art of weaving jamdani has been dec...Read More