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Workers hang a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Peka...

#8194398

North Coast Javanese Batik Textiles

8 May 2022

Workers hang a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Peka...

#8194398

8 May 2022

Workers hang a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pekalongan, Central Java, Indonesia, June 5, 2021. An area in which almost every available space is used for batik production, with a high level of poverty, vulnerable to both rising sea levels and high river peak flows. They hangs and washes at a polluted river for process traditional Javanese textile called Batik. Batik is a traditional Indonesian method of using wax to resist water-based dyes to depict patterns and drawings on fabric. At the heart of the problem is Pekalongan’s overreliance on groundwater, groundwater is also essential to the city’s thriving batik industry. The over-extraction of groundwater has caused the city to sink at a rate of between 10cm to 15cm per year.


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Workers hang a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Peka...

#8194400

North Coast Javanese Batik Textiles

8 May 2022

Workers hang a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Peka...

#8194400

8 May 2022

Workers hang a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pekalongan, Central Java, Indonesia, June 5, 2021. An area in which almost every available space is used for batik production, with a high level of poverty, vulnerable to both rising sea levels and high river peak flows. They hangs and washes at a polluted river for process traditional Javanese textile called Batik. Batik is a traditional Indonesian method of using wax to resist water-based dyes to depict patterns and drawings on fabric. At the heart of the problem is Pekalongan’s overreliance on groundwater, groundwater is also essential to the city’s thriving batik industry. The over-extraction of groundwater has caused the city to sink at a rate of between 10cm to 15cm per year.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


A worker hangs a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pe...

#8194402

North Coast Javanese Batik Textiles

8 May 2022

A worker hangs a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pe...

#8194402

8 May 2022

A worker hangs a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pekalongan, Central Java, Indonesia, June 5, 2021. An area in which almost every available space is used for batik production, with a high level of poverty, vulnerable to both rising sea levels and high river peak flows. They hangs and washes at a polluted river for process traditional Javanese textile called Batik. Batik is a traditional Indonesian method of using wax to resist water-based dyes to depict patterns and drawings on fabric. At the heart of the problem is Pekalongan’s overreliance on groundwater, groundwater is also essential to the city’s thriving batik industry. The over-extraction of groundwater has caused the city to sink at a rate of between 10cm to 15cm per year.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
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A worker hangs a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pe...

#8194404

North Coast Javanese Batik Textiles

8 May 2022

A worker hangs a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pe...

#8194404

8 May 2022

A worker hangs a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pekalongan, Central Java, Indonesia, June 5, 2021. An area in which almost every available space is used for batik production, with a high level of poverty, vulnerable to both rising sea levels and high river peak flows. They hangs and washes at a polluted river for process traditional Javanese textile called Batik. Batik is a traditional Indonesian method of using wax to resist water-based dyes to depict patterns and drawings on fabric. At the heart of the problem is Pekalongan’s overreliance on groundwater, groundwater is also essential to the city’s thriving batik industry. The over-extraction of groundwater has caused the city to sink at a rate of between 10cm to 15cm per year.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


A worker hangs a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pe...

#8194406

North Coast Javanese Batik Textiles

8 May 2022

A worker hangs a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pe...

#8194406

8 May 2022

A worker hangs a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pekalongan, Central Java, Indonesia, June 5, 2021. An area in which almost every available space is used for batik production, with a high level of poverty, vulnerable to both rising sea levels and high river peak flows. They hangs and washes at a polluted river for process traditional Javanese textile called Batik. Batik is a traditional Indonesian method of using wax to resist water-based dyes to depict patterns and drawings on fabric. At the heart of the problem is Pekalongan’s overreliance on groundwater, groundwater is also essential to the city’s thriving batik industry. The over-extraction of groundwater has caused the city to sink at a rate of between 10cm to 15cm per year.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


A worker hangs a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pe...

#8194408

North Coast Javanese Batik Textiles

8 May 2022

A worker hangs a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pe...

#8194408

8 May 2022

A worker hangs a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pekalongan, Central Java, Indonesia, June 5, 2021. An area in which almost every available space is used for batik production, with a high level of poverty, vulnerable to both rising sea levels and high river peak flows. They hangs and washes at a polluted river for process traditional Javanese textile called Batik. Batik is a traditional Indonesian method of using wax to resist water-based dyes to depict patterns and drawings on fabric. At the heart of the problem is Pekalongan’s overreliance on groundwater, groundwater is also essential to the city’s thriving batik industry. The over-extraction of groundwater has caused the city to sink at a rate of between 10cm to 15cm per year.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


A worker hangs a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pe...

#8194414

North Coast Javanese Batik Textiles

8 May 2022

A worker hangs a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pe...

#8194414

8 May 2022

A worker hangs a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pekalongan, Central Java, Indonesia, June 5, 2021. An area in which almost every available space is used for batik production, with a high level of poverty, vulnerable to both rising sea levels and high river peak flows. They hangs and washes at a polluted river for process traditional Javanese textile called Batik. Batik is a traditional Indonesian method of using wax to resist water-based dyes to depict patterns and drawings on fabric. At the heart of the problem is Pekalongan’s overreliance on groundwater, groundwater is also essential to the city’s thriving batik industry. The over-extraction of groundwater has caused the city to sink at a rate of between 10cm to 15cm per year.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


A worker hangs a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pe...

#8194420

North Coast Javanese Batik Textiles

8 May 2022

A worker hangs a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pe...

#8194420

8 May 2022

A worker hangs a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pekalongan, Central Java, Indonesia, June 5, 2021. An area in which almost every available space is used for batik production, with a high level of poverty, vulnerable to both rising sea levels and high river peak flows. They hangs and washes at a polluted river for process traditional Javanese textile called Batik. Batik is a traditional Indonesian method of using wax to resist water-based dyes to depict patterns and drawings on fabric. At the heart of the problem is Pekalongan’s overreliance on groundwater, groundwater is also essential to the city’s thriving batik industry. The over-extraction of groundwater has caused the city to sink at a rate of between 10cm to 15cm per year.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


A worker hangs a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pe...

#8194462

North Coast Javanese Batik Textiles

8 May 2022

A worker hangs a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pe...

#8194462

8 May 2022

A worker hangs a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pekalongan, Central Java, Indonesia, June 5, 2021. An area in which almost every available space is used for batik production, with a high level of poverty, vulnerable to both rising sea levels and high river peak flows. They hangs and washes at a polluted river for process traditional Javanese textile called Batik. Batik is a traditional Indonesian method of using wax to resist water-based dyes to depict patterns and drawings on fabric. At the heart of the problem is Pekalongan’s overreliance on groundwater, groundwater is also essential to the city’s thriving batik industry. The over-extraction of groundwater has caused the city to sink at a rate of between 10cm to 15cm per year.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


A worker hangs a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pe...

#8194464

North Coast Javanese Batik Textiles

8 May 2022

A worker hangs a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pe...

#8194464

8 May 2022

A worker hangs a cloth to dry out on the sun beside homes surrounded by rising sea levels at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pekalongan, Central Java, Indonesia, June 5, 2021. An area in which almost every available space is used for batik production, with a high level of poverty, vulnerable to both rising sea levels and high river peak flows. They hangs and washes at a polluted river for process traditional Javanese textile called Batik. Batik is a traditional Indonesian method of using wax to resist water-based dyes to depict patterns and drawings on fabric. At the heart of the problem is Pekalongan’s overreliance on groundwater, groundwater is also essential to the city’s thriving batik industry. The over-extraction of groundwater has caused the city to sink at a rate of between 10cm to 15cm per year.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


Workers dry batik after dyeing process as they make traditional Javanese textile called batik at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coasta...

#8194482

North Coast Javanese Batik Textiles

8 May 2022

Workers dry batik after dyeing process as they make traditional Javanese textile called batik at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coasta...

#8194482

8 May 2022

Workers dry batik after dyeing process as they make traditional Javanese textile called batik at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pekalongan, Central Java, Indonesia, June 5, 2021. An area in which almost every available space is used for batik production, with a high level of poverty, vulnerable to both rising sea levels and high river peak flows. Pekalongan is a city known for batik, a traditional Indonesian method of using wax to resist water-based dyes to depict patterns and drawings, usually on fabric. This textile has traditionally been crafted by hand in family workshops and small-scale cottage industries. Today, young Pekalongan residents are increasingly confident that they can aspire to reputable work and a reasonable income without having to join the migration to Indonesia’s larger cities.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


Workers remove the wax on batik with boiling water as they make traditional Javanese textile called batik at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborho...

#8194508

North Coast Javanese Batik Textiles

8 May 2022

Workers remove the wax on batik with boiling water as they make traditional Javanese textile called batik at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborho...

#8194508

8 May 2022

Workers remove the wax on batik with boiling water as they make traditional Javanese textile called batik at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pekalongan, Central Java, Indonesia, June 5, 2021. An area in which almost every available space is used for batik production, with a high level of poverty, vulnerable to both rising sea levels and high river peak flows. Pekalongan is a city known for batik, a traditional Indonesian method of using wax to resist water-based dyes to depict patterns and drawings, usually on fabric. This textile has traditionally been crafted by hand in family workshops and small-scale cottage industries. Today, young Pekalongan residents are increasingly confident that they can aspire to reputable work and a reasonable income without having to join the migration to Indonesia’s larger cities.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


A worker uses copper stamps to imprint patterns onto traditional Javanese textile called batik at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coast...

#8194516

North Coast Javanese Batik Textiles

8 May 2022

A worker uses copper stamps to imprint patterns onto traditional Javanese textile called batik at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coast...

#8194516

8 May 2022

A worker uses copper stamps to imprint patterns onto traditional Javanese textile called batik at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pekalongan, Central Java, Indonesia, June 5, 2021. An area in which almost every available space is used for batik production, with a high level of poverty, vulnerable to both rising sea levels and high river peak flows. Pekalongan is a city known for batik, a traditional Indonesian method of using wax to resist water-based dyes to depict patterns and drawings, usually on fabric. This textile has traditionally been crafted by hand in family workshops and small-scale cottage industries. Today, young Pekalongan residents are increasingly confident that they can aspire to reputable work and a reasonable income without having to join the migration to Indonesia’s larger cities.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


A woman carries a girl in her arms as she passes a batik production traditional Javanese textile called batik at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighb...

#8194520

North Coast Javanese Batik Textiles

8 May 2022

A woman carries a girl in her arms as she passes a batik production traditional Javanese textile called batik at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighb...

#8194520

8 May 2022

A woman carries a girl in her arms as she passes a batik production traditional Javanese textile called batik at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pekalongan, Central Java, Indonesia, June 5, 2021. An area in which almost every available space is used for batik production, with a high level of poverty, vulnerable to both rising sea levels and high river peak flows. Pekalongan is a city known for batik, a traditional Indonesian method of using wax to resist water-based dyes to depict patterns and drawings, usually on fabric. This textile has traditionally been crafted by hand in family workshops and small-scale cottage industries. Today, young Pekalongan residents are increasingly confident that they can aspire to reputable work and a reasonable income without having to join the migration to Indonesia’s larger cities.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


A batik craftswoman applies melted wax using a spouted tool called a canting as make traditional Javanese textile called batik at low-lying...

#8194522

North Coast Javanese Batik Textiles

8 May 2022

A batik craftswoman applies melted wax using a spouted tool called a canting as make traditional Javanese textile called batik at low-lying...

#8194522

8 May 2022

A batik craftswoman applies melted wax using a spouted tool called a canting as make traditional Javanese textile called batik at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pekalongan, Central Java, Indonesia, June 5, 2021. An area in which almost every available space is used for batik production, with a high level of poverty, vulnerable to both rising sea levels and high river peak flows. Pekalongan is a city known for batik, a traditional Indonesian method of using wax to resist water-based dyes to depict patterns and drawings, usually on fabric. This textile has traditionally been crafted by hand in family workshops and small-scale cottage industries. Today, young Pekalongan residents are increasingly confident that they can aspire to reputable work and a reasonable income without having to join the migration to Indonesia’s larger cities.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


Workers dry batik after dyeing process as they make traditional Javanese textile called batik at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coasta...

#8194524

North Coast Javanese Batik Textiles

8 May 2022

Workers dry batik after dyeing process as they make traditional Javanese textile called batik at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coasta...

#8194524

8 May 2022

Workers dry batik after dyeing process as they make traditional Javanese textile called batik at low-lying Jeruk Sari neighborhood in coastal Pekalongan, Central Java, Indonesia, June 5, 2021. An area in which almost every available space is used for batik production, with a high level of poverty, vulnerable to both rising sea levels and high river peak flows. Pekalongan is a city known for batik, a traditional Indonesian method of using wax to resist water-based dyes to depict patterns and drawings, usually on fabric. This textile has traditionally been crafted by hand in family workshops and small-scale cottage industries. Today, young Pekalongan residents are increasingly confident that they can aspire to reputable work and a reasonable income without having to join the migration to Indonesia’s larger cities.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


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