<p>In small tin sheds in a town outside Bangladesh's capital Dhaka, wooden looms are deftly operated by a group of men and women -- some of the country's last traditional weavers -- as huge garment factories churn out cheaper alternatives.</p>.<p>The nation's centuries-old traditional weaving was once highly sought after, with nobility from Asia and Europe wearing the fine muslin clothing.</p>.<p>But over the past two decades, Bangladesh has become one of the world's largest ready-made garment exporters, with 4,000 factories making clothes for the likes of retail giants Primark and H&M.</p>.<p>Left in its wake are traditional weavers such as 55-year-old Mohammad Abu Taher, who is the last of his family to take up the once celebrated vocation.</p>.<p>"My great-great-grandfather was a weaver and all my ancestors were into weaving," Taher told AFP as he sat in a tin shed with several other artisans in Ruhitpur, a town 20 kilometres (12 miles) from Dhaka.</p>.<p>Taher's two sons have left Ruhitpur for the capital to seek work, unwilling to pick up the dying art-form.</p>.<p>Three centuries ago, Ruhitpur was one of the region's biggest hubs for manufacturing lungis -- traditional sarongs worn by men.</p>.<p>There were 4,000 handlooms in Ruhitpur and nearby villages, employing 12,000 weavers.</p>.<p>A handwoven lungi from Ruhitpur was a "prized asset", said local trader Chowdhury Abdur Rahman, recalling stories of his father and uncles buying the cloth for their weddings.</p>.<p>"It was a big part of Bengal's heritage," historian Hameeda Hossain said of the historical region now known as Bangladesh and West Bengal state in India.</p>.<p>"Unfortunately, it can't compete with power looms."</p>.<p>Now, just three dozen weavers -- with an average age of 50 -- remain in Ruhitpur, serving a small group of customers still willing to shell out for the softer, handmade lungis.</p>.<p>"Our lungi is expensive. Still, some people haven't deserted us because of the softness of handmade clothing," 45-year-old Ruhitpur weaver Mohammad Rafiq told AFP.</p>.<p>But he admits his profession is dying out.</p>.<p>Employment in the town has shifted to almost a dozen factories manufacturing plastic, textiles and jute that have more than 10,000 people on the payroll.</p>.<p>"They (factories) have set up electric-powered weaving industries worth hundreds of millions of dollars," he said.</p>.<p>"They can make lungis and saris very cheaply. We can't compete with them in terms of price."</p>
<p>In small tin sheds in a town outside Bangladesh's capital Dhaka, wooden looms are deftly operated by a group of men and women -- some of the country's last traditional weavers -- as huge garment factories churn out cheaper alternatives.</p>.<p>The nation's centuries-old traditional weaving was once highly sought after, with nobility from Asia and Europe wearing the fine muslin clothing.</p>.<p>But over the past two decades, Bangladesh has become one of the world's largest ready-made garment exporters, with 4,000 factories making clothes for the likes of retail giants Primark and H&M.</p>.<p>Left in its wake are traditional weavers such as 55-year-old Mohammad Abu Taher, who is the last of his family to take up the once celebrated vocation.</p>.<p>"My great-great-grandfather was a weaver and all my ancestors were into weaving," Taher told AFP as he sat in a tin shed with several other artisans in Ruhitpur, a town 20 kilometres (12 miles) from Dhaka.</p>.<p>Taher's two sons have left Ruhitpur for the capital to seek work, unwilling to pick up the dying art-form.</p>.<p>Three centuries ago, Ruhitpur was one of the region's biggest hubs for manufacturing lungis -- traditional sarongs worn by men.</p>.<p>There were 4,000 handlooms in Ruhitpur and nearby villages, employing 12,000 weavers.</p>.<p>A handwoven lungi from Ruhitpur was a "prized asset", said local trader Chowdhury Abdur Rahman, recalling stories of his father and uncles buying the cloth for their weddings.</p>.<p>"It was a big part of Bengal's heritage," historian Hameeda Hossain said of the historical region now known as Bangladesh and West Bengal state in India.</p>.<p>"Unfortunately, it can't compete with power looms."</p>.<p>Now, just three dozen weavers -- with an average age of 50 -- remain in Ruhitpur, serving a small group of customers still willing to shell out for the softer, handmade lungis.</p>.<p>"Our lungi is expensive. Still, some people haven't deserted us because of the softness of handmade clothing," 45-year-old Ruhitpur weaver Mohammad Rafiq told AFP.</p>.<p>But he admits his profession is dying out.</p>.<p>Employment in the town has shifted to almost a dozen factories manufacturing plastic, textiles and jute that have more than 10,000 people on the payroll.</p>.<p>"They (factories) have set up electric-powered weaving industries worth hundreds of millions of dollars," he said.</p>.<p>"They can make lungis and saris very cheaply. We can't compete with them in terms of price."</p>