Friday, February 28, 2014
Wednesday, February 19, 2014
Product from jute
Jute is a kind of fiber.In Bangladesh jute is called golden fiber because of its luster and golden glow. Jute is very useful and safe to use.Different types of thing can be made from jute like sack,shoe,mobile holder,rocking chair,shopping bag,hat,mat,carpet even wall mat.It has a great value in textile sector.
Shoes with jute
Now a days jute is being used for fabric.
We can use this fabric for many purpose for example we can make shoes with jute fiber.
We can use this fabric for many purpose for example we can make shoes with jute fiber.
Wednesday, February 12, 2014
Alpona design
Alpona is one of ancient cultural design of Bangladesh . Alpona is generally used in wedding ceremony . Alopona is very colorful design.
Sunday, February 2, 2014
History of Cotton
Cotton is a very useful
material in our day to day life. No one
knows exactly how old cotton is. Scientists searching Open Cotton Bollcaves in
Mexico found bits of cotton bolls and pieces of cotton cloth that proved to be
at least 7,000 years old. They also found that the cotton itself was much like
that grown in America nowadays. In the Indus River Valley in Pakistan, cotton
was being grown, spun and woven into cloth 3,000 years BC. At about the same
time, natives of Egypt’s Nile valley were making and wearing cotton clothing.
Arab merchants brought cotton cloth to Europe about 800 A.D. When Columbus
discovered America in 1492, he found cotton growing in the Bahama Islands. By
1500, cotton was known generally throughout the world. Cotton seed are believed
to have been planted in Florida in 1556 and in Virginia in 1607. By 1616,
colonists were growing cotton along the James River in Virginia. Cotton was
first spun by machinery in England in 1730. The industrial revolution in
England and the invention of the cotton gin in the U.S. paved the way for the
important place cotton holds in the world today. Eli Whitney GinEli Whitney, a
native of Massachusetts, secured a patent on the cotton gin in 1793, though
patent office records indicate that the first cotton gin may have been built by
a machinist named Noah Homes two years before Whitney’s patent was filed. The
gin, short for engine, could do the work 10 times faster than by hand. The gin
made it possible to supply large quantities of cotton fiber to the fast-growing
textile industry. Within 10 years, the value of the U.S. cotton crop rose from
$150,000 to more than $8 million Cotton was used in the Old World at least
7,000 years ago (5th millennium BC). Evidence of cotton use has been found at
the site of Mehrgarh, where early cotton threads have been preserved in copper
beads. Cotton cultivation became more widespread during the Indus Valley
Civilization, which covered parts of modern eastern Pakistan and northwestern
India. The Indus cotton industry was well developed and some methods used in
cotton spinning and fabrication continued to be used until the
industrialization of India. Between 2000 and 1000 BC cotton became widespread
across majority of India. For example, it has been found at the site of Hallus
in Karnataka dating from around 1000 BC.
Cotton fabrics discovered in a cave near Tehuacán, Mexico
have been dated to around 5800 BC, although it is difficult to know for certain
due to fiber decay. Other sources date the domestication of cotton in Mexico to
approximately 5000 to 3000 BC.
The Greeks and the Arabs were not familiar with cotton until
the Wars of Alexander the Great, as his contemporary Megasthenes told Seleucus
I Nicator of "there being trees on which wool grows" in
"Indica". This might actually be a reference to the 'tree cotton',
Gossypium arboreum, which is a native of the Indian subcontinent.
According to the Columbia Encyclopedia:
Cotton has been spun, woven, and dyed since prehistoric
times. It clothed the people of ancient India, Egypt, and China. Hundreds of
years before the Christian era, cotton textiles were woven in India with
matchless skill, and their use spread to the Mediterranean countries.
In Iran (Persia), the history of cotton dates back to the
Achaemenid era (5th century BC); however, there are few sources about the
planting of cotton in pre-Islamic Iran. The planting of cotton was common in Merv,
Ray and Pars of Iran. In the poems of Persian poets, especially Ferdowsi's
Shahname, there are references to cotton ("panbe" in Persian). Marco
Polo (13th century) refers to the major products of Persia, including cotton.
John Chardin, a French traveler of 17th century, who had visited the Safavid
Persia, has approved the vast cotton farms of Persia.
During the Han dynasty, cotton was grown by non Chinese
peoples in the southern Chinese province of Yunnan. In Peru, cultivation of the
indigenous cotton species Gossypium barbadense was the backbone of the
development of coastal cultures, such as the Norte Chico, Moche and Nazca.
Cotton was grown upriver, made into nets and traded with fishing villages along
the coast for large supplies of fish. The Spanish who came to Mexico and Peru
in the early 16th century found the people growing cotton and wearing clothing
made of it.
During the late medieval period, cotton became known as an
imported fiber in northern Europe, without any knowledge of how it was derived,
other than that it was a plant. Because Herodotus had written in his Histories,
Book III, 106, that in India trees grew in the wild producing wool, it was
assumed that that plant was a tree, rather than a shrub. This aspect is
retained in the name for cotton in several Germanic languages, such as German
Baumwolle, which translates as "tree wool" (Baum means
"tree"; Wolle means "wool"). Noting its similarities to
wool, people in the region could only imagine that cotton must be produced by
plant-borne sheep. John Mandeville, writing in 1350, stated as fact the
now-preposterous belief: "There grew there [India] a wonderful tree which
bore tiny lambs on the endes of its branches. These branches were so pliable
that they bent down to allow the lambs to feed when they are hungrie
[sic]." (See Vegetable Lamb of Tartary.) By the end of the 16th century,
cotton was cultivated throughout the warmer regions in Asia and the Americas.
The Vegetable Lamb of Tartary
India's cotton-processing sector gradually declined during
British expansion in India and the establishment of colonial rule during the
late 18th and early 19th centuries. This was largely due to aggressive
colonialist mercantile policies of the British East India Company, which made
cotton processing and manufacturing workshops in India uncompetitive. Indian
markets were increasingly forced to supply only raw cotton and were forced, by
British-imposed law, to purchase manufactured textiles from Britain.[citation
needed]
Industrial Revolution in Britain
The advent of the Industrial Revolution in Britain provided
a great boost to cotton manufacture, as textiles emerged as Britain's leading
export. In 1738, Lewis Paul and John Wyatt, of Birmingham, England, patented
the roller spinning machine, and the flyer-and-bobbin system for drawing cotton
to a more even thickness using two sets of rollers that traveled at different
speeds. Later, the invention of the James Hargreaves' spinning jenny in
1764,Richard Arkwright's spinning frame in 1769 and Samuel Crompton's spinning
mule in 1775 enabled British spinners to produce cotton yarn at much higher
rates. From the late 18th century onwards, the British city of Manchester
acquired the nickname "Cottonopolis" due to the cotton industry's
omnipresence within the city, and Manchester's role as the heart of the global
cotton trade. Production capacity in Britain and the United States was improved
by the invention of the cotton gin by the American Eli Whitney in 1793. Before
the development of cotton gins, the cotton fibers had to be pulled from the
seeds tediously by hand. By the late 1700s a number of crude ginning machines
had been developed, however, to produce a bale of cotton required over 600
hours of human labor,[14] making large scale production uneconomical in the
United States, even with the use of humans as slave labor. The gin that Whitney
manufactured (the Holmes design) reduced the hours down to just a dozen or so
per bale. Although Whitney patented his own design for a cotton gin, he
manufactured a prior design from Henry Odgen Holmes, for which Holmes filed a
patent in 1796.[14] Improving technology and increasing control of world
markets allowed British traders to develop a commercial chain in which raw
cotton fibers were (at first) purchased from colonial plantations, processed
into cotton cloth in the mills of Lancashire, and then exported on British
ships to captive colonial markets in West Africa, India, and China (via
Shanghai and Hong Kong).
By the 1840s, India was no longer capable of supplying the
vast quantities of cotton fibers needed by mechanized British factories, while
shipping bulky, low-price cotton from India to Britain was time-consuming and
expensive. This, coupled with the emergence of American cotton as a superior
type (due to the longer, stronger fibers of the two domesticated native
American species, Gossypium hirsutum and Gossypium barbadense), encouraged
British traders to purchase cotton from plantations in the United States and
the Caribbean. By the mid-19th century, "King Cotton" had become the
backbone of the southern American economy. In the United States, cultivating
and harvesting cotton became the leading occupation of slaves.
During the American Civil War, American cotton exports
slumped due to a Union blockade on Southern ports, also because of a strategic
decision by the Confederate government to cut exports, hoping to force Britain
to recognize the Confederacy or enter the war, prompting the main purchasers of
cotton, Britain and France to turn to Egyptian cotton. British and French
traders invested heavily in cotton plantations and the Egyptian government of
Viceroy Isma'il took out substantial loans from European bankers and stock
exchanges. After the American Civil War ended in 1865, British and French
traders abandoned Egyptian cotton and returned to cheap American
exports,[citation needed] sending Egypt into a deficit spiral that led to the
country declaring bankruptcy in 1876, a key factor behind Egypt's occupation by
the British Empire in 1882.
Prisoners farming cotton under the trusty system in Parchman
Farm, Mississippi, 1911
Picking cotton in Georgia, United States, in 1943
During this time, cotton cultivation in the British Empire,
especially India, greatly increased to replace the lost production of the American
South. Through tariffs and other restrictions, the British government
discouraged the production of cotton cloth in India; rather, the raw fiber was
sent to England for processing. The Indian Mahatma Gandhi described the
process:
English people buy Indian cotton in the field, picked by
Indian labor at seven cents a day, through an optional monopoly.
This cotton is shipped on British ships, a three-week
journey across the Indian Ocean, down the Red Sea, across the Mediterranean,
through Gibraltar, across the Bay of Biscay and the Atlantic Ocean to London.
One hundred per cent profit on this freight is regarded as small.
The cotton is turned into cloth in Lancashire. You pay
shilling wages instead of Indian pennies to your workers. The English worker
not only has the advantage of better wages, but the steel companies of England
get the profit of building the factories and machines. Wages; profits; all
these are spent in England.
The finished product is sent back to India at European
shipping rates, once again on British ships. The captains, officers, sailors of
these ships, whose wages must be paid, are English. The only Indians who profit
are a few lascars who do the dirty work on the boats for a few cents a day.
The cloth is finally sold back to the kings and landlords of
India who got the money to buy this expensive cloth out of the poor peasants of
India who worked at seven cents a day. (Fisher 1932 pp 154–156)
In the United States, Southern cotton provided capital for
the continuing development of the North. The cotton produced by enslaved
African Americans not only helped the South, but also enriched Northern
merchants. Much of the Southern cotton was transshipped through the northern
ports.
Cotton remained a key crop in the Southern economy after
emancipation and the end of the Civil War in 1865. Across the South,
sharecropping evolved, in which free black farmers and landless white farmers
worked on white-owned cotton plantations of the wealthy in return for a share
of the profits. Cotton plantations required vast labor forces to hand-pick
cotton, and it was not until the 1950s that reliable harvesting machinery was
introduced into the South (prior to this, cotton-harvesting machinery had been
too clumsy to pick cotton without shredding the fibers). During the early 20th
century, employment in the cotton industry fell, as machines began to replace
laborers, and the South's rural labor force dwindled during the First and
Second World Wars. Today, cotton remains a major export of the southern United
States, and a majority of the world's annual cotton crop is of the long-staple
American variety.
.
Saturday, February 1, 2014
Different types of cotton bale
HUGE COTTON BALE
COTTON BALE LORRY
COTTON BALES
DRY COTTON BALE
INDIAN COTTON BALE
YOUNG MAN WORKING WITH COTTON BALE
COTTON BALE LORRY
COTTON BALES
DRY COTTON BALE
INDIAN COTTON BALE
YOUNG MAN WORKING WITH COTTON BALE
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