Sharee or saree (in Bengali=শাড়ি, Śāṛi ) is the national wear of Bangladeshi women. Most women who are married wear sharee as their regular dress while young-unmarried girls wear sharee as an occasional dress. The shari is worn by women throughout Bangladesh. Sari is the most popular dress for women in Bangladesh,.
3. Brand List.
•Aarong by BRAC
•YELOLOW by beximco
•Pride Ltd.
•JM Classic Fashion.
•Karupalli-BRDB.
•Nabarupa
4. AboutSharee or saree (in Bengali=শাড়ি, Śāṛi
) is the national wear
of Bangladeshi women. Most women
who are married wear sharee as their
regular dress while young-unmarried
girls wear sharee as an occasional
dress. The shari is worn by women
throughout Bangladesh. Sari is the
most popular dress for women in
Bangladesh,
5. Contain Overview
1. Styles of draping
2. How to wear a saree
3. Kinds of Saree
4. Surface Illustration media.
5. Fashion Show.
6. Photo Shoot.
7. Magazine.
6. There are more than 80 recorded ways to
wear a sari. The most common style is for
the sari to be wrapped around the waist, with
the loose end of the drape to be worn over
the shoulder, baring the midriff. However, the
sari can be draped in several different styles,
though some styles do require a sari of a
particular length or form.
7. Traditionally the Bengali style is worn without pleats
where the saree is wrapped around in an anti-
clockwise direction around the waist and then a
second time from the other direction. The loose end
is a lot longer and that goes around the body over the
left shoulder. There is enough cloth left to cover the
head as well. The modern style of wearing a saree
originates from the Tagore family. Jnanadanandini
Devi, the wife of Rabindranath Tagore's elder
brother Satyendranath came up with a different way
to wear the saree after her stay in Bombay. This
required a chemise or jacket (old name for blouse)
and petticoat to be worn under the saree and made it
possible for women to come out of the secluded
women's quarters in this attire.
8. Saree
1. Handloom saree: Handloom sarees are a
traditional textile art of Bangladesh and India. The
production of handloom sarees are important for
economic development in rural India. Completion of a
single saree takes two to three days of work. Several
regions have their own traditions of handloom sarees.
• Baluchuri Sarees
• Kanchipuram Sarees
• Tussar Sarees
• Benarasi Sarees.
• Jamdani Saree.
• Maslin Khatha Saree
• Natural Silk Saree (Khatha Switch)
• Tat saree (demra, Naryangang,)
1. Powerloom Saree
• Tangail saree
• Cotton Saree
• Jakerd/Dobbi design Saree
9. Surface Illustration.
1. Flat Sketch / Motive Sketch.
2. Hand Embroidery (Karchupi).
3. Machine Embroidery.
4. Aari/ Double embroidery.
5. Computer-controlled embroidery
6. Flat bed Screen Print Saree.
7. Hand block printing
8. Digital textile Print Saree.
9. Hand painted sarees
10. Dyeing, Natural Dyeing, Acid Dyeing,
tie dyeing, boutique.
11. Appliqué sarees.
12. Cut to cut saree.
13. Adobe in design suit.
14. Nakshi saree.
10. Flat Sketch / Motive Sketch
Flat Sketch / Motive Sketch is essentially the process of
creating designs for woven, knitted or printed fabrics or
surface ornamented fabrics. designers are involved with the
production of these designs, which are used, sometimes
repetitively, in clothing and interior decor items.
A motif may be an element in the iconography of a particular
subject or type of subject that is seen in other works, or may
form the main subject, as the Master of Animals motif in
ancient art typically does. The related motif of confronted
animals is often seen alone, but may also be repeated
11. Hand Embroidery (zardozi embroidery)
Embroidery is the handicraft of
decorating fabric or other materials
with needle and thread or yarn. Embroidery
may also incorporate other materials such
as, pearls, beads, quills, and sequins. Today,
embroidery is most often seen on caps, hats,
coats, blankets, dress shirts, denim,
stockings, and golf shirts. Embroidery is
available with a wide variety of thread or
yarn color.
The basic techniques or stitches on surviving
examples of the earliest embroidery—chain
stitch, buttonhole or blanket stitch, running
stitch, satin stitch, cross stitch—remain the
fundamental techniques of hand embroidery
today.
zardozi embroidery
12. Machine Embroidery.
Machine embroidery is
an embroidery process whereby
a sewing machine or embroidery
machine is used to create patterns on
textiles. It is used commercially in
product branding, corporate advertising,
and uniform adornment. Hobbyists also
machine embroider for personal sewing
and craft projects.
Machine Embroidery.
14. Computer-controlled embroidery
Computerized embroidery machines are
specialized machines that can create embroidery
from computerized designs. Such machines exist
for the home market, for the small independent
professional and for mass production. Many home
sewing machines can be turned into an
embroidery machine by adding a hardware
module. Many modern sewing machines
(including the ones for the home market) can be
computer-controlled and are also known
as computerized sewing machines.
15. Flat bed Screen Print Saree.
Screen printing is a printing technique whereby a
mesh is used to transfer ink onto a substrate,
except in areas made impermeable to the ink by a
blocking stencil. A blade or squeegee is moved
across the screen to fill the open mesh apertures
with ink, and a reverse stroke then causes the
screen to touch the substrate momentarily along a
line of contact. This causes the ink to wet the
substrate and be pulled out of the mesh apertures
as the screen springs back after the blade has
passed.
24. Appliqué sarees.
Appliqué comes from the French
word appliquer,[ meaning "to put on".
There are two variants to this technique:
appliqué, where a fabric shape is sewn
over a base layer, and reverse applique,
wherein two layers of fabric are laid
down, and a shape is subsequently cut
out from the upper layer, exposing the
lower layer, before both are stitched
together.