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The $10 Million Art of Textile in Bangladesh — A Living Legacy of Human Craft

In 1997,
A family from Kotbari, located at the foothills of the Lalmai Hills in Cumilla, attended a wedding ceremony. Inside that home, a single handcrafted wall mat captured everyone’s attention. It was not only visually striking—it carried a rare sense of life, depth, and memory woven into its design. At that very moment, a family member carefully sketched the motif onto tracing paper and brought it back home.

Back in their locality, five to six neighboring women came together. There was no formal plan, no commercial intention—only curiosity, admiration, and a shared creative instinct. What followed was a quiet artistic journey.

Over nearly 10 days of continuous effort, patience, and fine craftsmanship, the first wall mat was completed. Encouraged by this achievement, two more copies were later created—kept within the community as personal memories.

Nearly three decades later, one of these rare creations has been respectfully preserved from my family collection and officially included in the permanent archive of the Texheritage-Bangladesh: Museum, Innovation & Preservation Foundation Collection.

A simple composition—pink polyester base fabric layered with net textile, enriched with delicate hand embroidery—yet within these humble materials lies an extraordinary story of time, emotion, and collective women’s craftsmanship.

For almost 30 years, it remained a part of a family memory. Today, it has transformed into a documented heritage object—carefully preserved, reconstructed, and secured for the future.

As a curator, I firmly believe that history is not limited to kings, empires, or grand events. History also lives in the hands of ordinary people who quietly shape culture without recognition, leaving behind invaluable heritage for future generations.

Texheritage-Bangladesh: Museum, Innovation & Preservation Foundation is one of the country’s first museum-based textile research initiatives, dedicated to preserving the silent witnesses of Bangladesh’s textile, craft, and cultural heritage for future generations through research, innovation, and documentation.

1997's Textile Art From Bangladesh

Collection No: THB – HPC – 1997-001
Place of Origin: Cumilla, Bangladesh
Year: 1997
Materials: Polyester fabric, nylon net, thread
Technique: Layered textile application on board with hand stitching
Condition: Preserved and reconstructed
Collection: Texheritage Bangladesh Museum

Price Update (2026)USD 10 MillionYear1997AuthorTexheritage BangladeshShare

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