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"thread factory"
297 professional editorial images found
#5828904
5 Jul 2020
A worker dry fabric under sun after dyeing them in factory in Narsingdi, Bangladesh on July 4, 2020. Most of the time worker dyeing cloths without taking any gloves and it causes of skin diseases.
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#5828906
5 Jul 2020
A worker dry fabric under sun after dyeing them in factory in Narsingdi, Bangladesh on July 4, 2020. Most of the time worker dyeing cloths without taking any gloves and it causes of skin diseases.
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#5828908
5 Jul 2020
A worker dry fabric under sun after dyeing them in factory in Narsingdi, Bangladesh on July 4, 2020. Most of the time worker dyeing cloths without taking any gloves and it causes of skin diseases.
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#5828910
5 Jul 2020
A worker dry fabric under sun after dyeing them in factory in Narsingdi, Bangladesh on July 4, 2020. Most of the time worker dyeing cloths without taking any gloves and it causes of skin diseases.
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#5828912
5 Jul 2020
A worker dry fabric under sun after dyeing them in factory in Narsingdi, Bangladesh on July 4, 2020. Most of the time worker dyeing cloths without taking any gloves and it causes of skin diseases.
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#5828914
5 Jul 2020
A worker dry fabric under sun after dyeing them in factory in Narsingdi, Bangladesh on July 4, 2020. Most of the time worker dyeing cloths without taking any gloves and it causes of skin diseases.
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#5828916
5 Jul 2020
A worker dry fabric under sun after dyeing them in factory in Narsingdi, Bangladesh on July 4, 2020. Most of the time worker dyeing cloths without taking any gloves and it causes of skin diseases.
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#5828918
5 Jul 2020
A worker dry fabric under sun after dyeing them in factory in Narsingdi, Bangladesh on July 4, 2020. Most of the time worker dyeing cloths without taking any gloves and it causes of skin diseases.
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#5828920
5 Jul 2020
A worker dry fabric under sun after dyeing them in factory in Narsingdi, Bangladesh on July 4, 2020. Most of the time worker dyeing cloths without taking any gloves and it causes of skin diseases.
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#5828922
5 Jul 2020
A worker dry fabric under sun after dyeing them in factory in Narsingdi, Bangladesh on July 4, 2020. Most of the time worker dyeing cloths without taking any gloves and it causes of skin diseases.
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#4703202
22 Jul 2019
Bobbins with thread at a garment factory in Vavuniya, Sri Lanka on 17 August 2017.
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#4703122
22 Jul 2019
Garment factory in Vavuniya, Sri Lanka on 17 August 2017.
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#3692730
22 Jan 2019
Palestinians work at candy factory in Gaza City on January 22, 2019.
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#3122344
8 Sep 2018
Garment factory in Vavuniya, Sri Lanka.
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#2001003
5 Jun 2017
Bangladeshi weaver weaves Benarasi sari (Woman Wear) on a traditional wooden hand weaving loom at Mirpur in Dhaka, Bangladesh. On June 05, 2017 Benarasi Sari has an ancient history beginning from the Mughal Empire in the 16th century. It is known that it originated from Benaras, a northern city of India. Benarasi Sari found its way to Bangladesh, when the Muslims migrated from Benaras into Bangladesh. It was these migrants that started the practice of making Benarasi Sari at Mohammadpur and Mirpur in Dhaka.The texture of a Benarasi fabric can be either light or heavy. The silk is first put into rollers that twist a single silk thread with another to thicken its texture. This is then heated and put into a Tana where it is made into a bundle. The threads are then dyed elsewhere. The threads are stretched out in a single room made of rusted tin and worn out bamboo with barely any ventilation or lighting. In another similar room, a weaver weaves the designs on a sari. A single Benarasi Sari that is 21 feet in length and 3.5 feet in breadth can take a week or longer to be completed.
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#2001006
5 Jun 2017
Bangladeshi weaver weaves Benarasi sari (Woman Wear) on a traditional wooden hand weaving loom at Mirpur in Dhaka, Bangladesh. On June 05, 2017 Benarasi Sari has an ancient history beginning from the Mughal Empire in the 16th century. It is known that it originated from Benaras, a northern city of India. Benarasi Sari found its way to Bangladesh, when the Muslims migrated from Benaras into Bangladesh. It was these migrants that started the practice of making Benarasi Sari at Mohammadpur and Mirpur in Dhaka.The texture of a Benarasi fabric can be either light or heavy. The silk is first put into rollers that twist a single silk thread with another to thicken its texture. This is then heated and put into a Tana where it is made into a bundle. The threads are then dyed elsewhere. The threads are stretched out in a single room made of rusted tin and worn out bamboo with barely any ventilation or lighting. In another similar room, a weaver weaves the designs on a sari. A single Benarasi Sari that is 21 feet in length and 3.5 feet in breadth can take a week or longer to be completed.
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