Thousands of pieces of cloth are strewn across the field to dry in the batik village of Narayanganj, Bangladesh. Batik Village is spread over an area of ​​about 15,000 square feet. Clothes drying takes about four hours per day at a temperature of about 34° Celsius. They are used to make colourful tshirts and other types of colourful clothing and are sold all over the world. About 10,000 clothes are dried in this field every day

this photo taken by Dhaka Bangladesh. Old or 2nd grade leather is bought for very little money to be reused in a popular industry here. The leather is first dried in the sun using various dyes and then prepared for use. Here the workers are paid less than £4 for their labour. At the end of the process, they make new leather into shoe soles, belts, gloves for construction workers, car seats, winter coats, bags and other leather products which are sold in the local market as well as exported to different countries. Leather and leather products are the fourth largest export of Bangladesh.

Farmers collecting the water lilies in the Satla marshland near Barishal, Bangladesh. Here farmers collected water lilies using boats over flooded land designated to grow the crop. Waterlilies grow abundantly in the village which is situated 40 miles from the city of Barisal, Bangladesh. It is known as the capital of water lilies or Shapla, the national flower of Bangladesh. The whole village is engaged in the cultivation of the flower. The workers start very early in the morning at 6am and work through the day. “Every flower is carefully hand picked and collected inside the farmers’ little wooden boat. The water lilies from a 10,000 acre canal and wellands area. Growing and harvesting the lilies is a community effort, and farmers sell the flowers in local markets. They are not just bought for their looks, they’re also valued in traditional Ayurvedic therapies for their medicinal properties. And it is widely used as a vegetable.