Green Peacock of Konbaung Dynasty | Eco Tote Bag
With our Eco Tote Bag, you can mix trendy and stylish while being eco-conscious! This organic cotton twill tote bag has a roomy (extra-large) interior that be used for storing and carrying groceries, books and so much more. Combined it with the bold and charismatic designs reflecting Myanmar’s intriguing culture and heritage, this tote bag could be your perfect companion for your daily activities.
Type: Organic Cotton Everyday Tote
Printing Method: Direct-To-Garment (DTG)
Exclusively designed for you by talented Myanmar designers and creative minds.
With our Eco Tote Bag, you can mix trendy and stylish while being eco-conscious! This organic cotton twill tote bag has a roomy (extra-large) interior that be used for storing and carrying groceries, books and so much more. Combined it with the bold and charismatic designs reflecting Myanmar’s intriguing culture and heritage, this tote bag could be your perfect companion for your daily activities.
Type: Organic Cotton Everyday Tote
Printing Method: Direct-To-Garment (DTG)
Exclusively designed for you by talented Myanmar designers and creative minds.
With our Eco Tote Bag, you can mix trendy and stylish while being eco-conscious! This organic cotton twill tote bag has a roomy (extra-large) interior that be used for storing and carrying groceries, books and so much more. Combined it with the bold and charismatic designs reflecting Myanmar’s intriguing culture and heritage, this tote bag could be your perfect companion for your daily activities.
Type: Organic Cotton Everyday Tote
Printing Method: Direct-To-Garment (DTG)
Exclusively designed for you by talented Myanmar designers and creative minds.
Product Features
100% Certified Organic Cotton 3/1 Twill
Fabric Weight: 8 oz/yd² (272 g/m²)
Cotton rope handles with cream sheeting interior lining
Weight Limit": 30 lbs (13.6 kg)
Every product went through a 3-step quality check system
Organic cotton products are farmed using organic compost that uses biological pest control. No synthetic substances or genetic modifications were used during the production of this blank product.
Size & Fit
Length: 16” (40.6cm)
Width: 14 1/2” (35.6)
Depth: 5” (14 cm)
Handle Strap: 1” (2.5 cm) wide dual straps. 12 1/4” (31.1 cm)
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Delivery
Standard (United States) | 5-7 Business Days
Standard (Canada) | 7-10 Business Days
Standard (Rest of the World) | 10-14 Business Days
Direct Shipment from Myanmar | 10-20 Business Days
To ensure quality and customer satisfaction, we use various Suppliers and Fulfilment Partners for our products and orders. As such, delivery times provided here are estimated and might differ based on the number of products in the order to be processed and fulfilled.
You will see the available shipping method and delivery costs in the order checkout.
Order Production
Items are made to order and typically ship within 2-3 business days.
Items sourced directly from Myanmar typically ship within 5-7 business days.
Returns
Return requests can be made within 30 days of your item(s) delivery. Terms & Conditions Apply.
For more information please visit Delivery & Returns.
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Machine wash cold, inside-out, gentle cycle with mild detergent and similar colors. Use non-chlorine bleach, only when necessary. No fabric softeners.
Remove all items from the bag before cleaning.
Spot clean visible stains with stain remover.
Tumble dry low, or air dry for longest life.
Cool iron inside-out if neccessary. Do not iron decoration.
Do not dry clean.
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The Green Peafowl (Peacock) of Konbaung Dynasty
The green peafowl, called the 'daung' (Burmese: ဒေါင်း) or u-doung (ဥဒေါင်း) in Burmese, is one of the national animals of Myanmar and is strongly associated with the Konbaung monarchy and the anti-colonial nationalist movements and thus is popularly seen as the symbol of the Burmese state.
Embraced by kings and freedom fighters alike, Myanmar's peacocks have long been a national symbol of pride and resistance -- but they are becoming ever harder to spot in the wild. Decades ago the birds, with their bright green plumage and famously ostentatious male tail feathers, were ubiquitous.
But like so many of Myanmar's most iconic flora and fauna, rampant poaching and habitat loss under decades of unaccountable junta rule has hit their numbers hard. For Myanmar, the declining peacock population is more than just a conservation tragedy -- it's a blow to the national psyche.
The bird occupies a lofty place in the country's culture. For decades it was the official symbol of Burma's last kings, the Konbaung dynasty. Their monarchs wore peacock insignia on their robes and famously sat atop the Peacock Throne until their rule was toppled by British colonialists.
The dancing peacock, ka-daung (Burmese: ကဒေါင်း) was used as the symbol of the Burmese monarch and was stamped on the highest denominator coins minted by Burma's last dynasty.
Upon independence, it was again featured on Burmese banknotes from 1948 til 1966. The 'dancing peacock' also appeared on certain flags of the Konbaung dynasty, British Burma, and also the State of Burma which was a collaborationist Japanese client state during the Second World War.
An alternative pose, to denote struggle, is the fighting peacock, khoot-daung (Burmese: ခွပ်ဒေါင်း) as seen visibly on the party flag of Aung San Suu Kyi's de jure disbanded National League for Democracy.
Due to the political connections, the peacock has been discarded in favor of the Chinthe by the military junta which ruled Burma after 1988.