The natural fibre used in the fabric of our jute bags comes from the stem and outer skin of the jute plant. Jute is a rain-fed crop that doesn't need much in the way of fertilizer or pesticides. Production is concentrated around the Ganges delta region of India and Bangladesh where the warm, wet climate during the monsoon season provides ideal growing conditions. It takes between four and six months for the plants reach a height of around 12 feet (3.5m) when they are harvested. The harvested stems are then tied together and soaked in water to soften before being stripped of theirfibres.
The climatic conditions of Bangladesh are suitable for harvesting jute, enabling the country to be one of the top exporters of jute. In the year of 2007-08, Bangladesh produced about 990,000 tons of raw jute of which it exported 477,000 tons. Thus in these years, Bangladesh held a share of 63.26% of the global exports of jute goods. Once it was called the ?Golden Fibre of Bangladesh? because many people of our country lived on it and we have earned a huge amount of foreign money by selling jute products.
Jute is the second most important vegetable fibre after cotton. Jute is used chiefly to make cloth for wrapping bales of raw cotton, and to make sacks and coarse cloth. The fibers are also woven into curtains, chair coverings, carpets, area rugs, hessian cloth, and backing for linoleum.
The fibers are used alone or blended with other types of fiber to make twine and rope. Jute butts, the coarse ends of the plants, are used to make inexpensive cloth. Conversely, very fine threads of jute can be separated out and made into imitation silk. As jute fibers are also being used to make pulp and paper, and with increasing concern over forest destruction for the wood pulp used to make most paper, the importance of jute for this purpose may increase. Jute has a long history of use in the sackings, carpets, wrapping fabrics (cotton bale), and construction fabric manufacturing industry.
Jute is used in the manufacture of a number of fabrics such as Hessian cloth, sacking, scrim, carpet backing cloth (CBC), and canvas. Hessian, lighter than sacking, is used for bags, wrappers, wall-coverings, upholstery, and home furnishings. Sacking, a fabric made of heavy jute fibres, has its use in the name. Jute packaging is used as an eco-friendly substitute.
1. Environmentally friendly, jute fibre can be recycled.
2. It is 100% Biodegradable thus prevents land pollutions.
3. It will lessen the use of harmful plastic materials used for packing.
4. You can eat it! Apparently the leaves taste a bit like spinach.
5. The sticks that remain after harvesting jute fibre are used for various purposes.
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12 Comments
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Posted 30-12-2013 00:37
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Posted 27-12-2013 00:47
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Posted 24-12-2013 22:34
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Posted 24-12-2013 21:42
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Posted 18-12-2013 18:33
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Posted 13-12-2013 16:06
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Posted 04-12-2013 21:09
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Posted 04-12-2013 20:01
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Posted 03-12-2013 18:49
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Posted 03-12-2013 07:10
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Posted 02-10-2013 09:52
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Posted 29-09-2013 11:49