Where leather and willow meet

Published February 7, 2011
A worker cuts a piece of willow to make a bat.
A worker cuts a piece of willow to make a bat.
Workers file the edges of cane sticks to form handles for cricket bats.
Workers file the edges of cane sticks to form handles for cricket bats.
A worker wraps a cloth on the cane handle of a bat after its edges were filed to a smooth finish.
A worker wraps a cloth on the cane handle of a bat after its edges were filed to a smooth finish.
A worker wraps strings around a cork as part of the cricket ball making process.
A worker wraps strings around a cork as part of the cricket ball making process.
A worker sits behind bunches of cork core that are left on the ground to dry before being used to make cricket balls.
A worker sits behind bunches of cork core that are left on the ground to dry before being used to make cricket balls.
A worker uses a hammer to shape a cork wrapped in strings into a spherical core.
A worker uses a hammer to shape a cork wrapped in strings into a spherical core.
A worker tans pieces of leather which will be used to make cricket balls.
A worker tans pieces of leather which will be used to make cricket balls.
A worker stitches two leather halves together.
A worker stitches two leather halves together.
A worker stitches two leather halves together.
A worker stitches two leather halves together.
A string-wrapped spherical core and two leather halves are weighed before they are made into a cricket ball.
A string-wrapped spherical core and two leather halves are weighed before they are made into a cricket ball.
A worker stitches two leather halves together with a spherical core inside to form a cricket ball.
A worker stitches two leather halves together with a spherical core inside to form a cricket ball.
A worker stamps balls before they are packed at a factory.
A worker stamps balls before they are packed at a factory.
Workers pack cricket balls.
Workers pack cricket balls.
A worker adjusts the grip on the handle of a cricket bat.
A worker adjusts the grip on the handle of a cricket bat.
A customer (L) buys a cricket ball at a shop in the old quarters of Delhi.
A customer (L) buys a cricket ball at a shop in the old quarters of Delhi.

Cricket equipment makers race to meet a demand surge ahead of the Cricket World Cup. BDM, a family cricket equipment business for almost 90 years, has made bats, balls and other equipment for most of India's top cricketers, and international stars such as Sri Lanka's Sanath Jayasuriya and the West Indies legend Brian Lara. The company produces an average of 150,000 bats and 220,000 balls every year, using willow from England and India's northern Kashmir region. Ten per cent of its products are exported, mainly to the cricketing heartlands of the UK, Australia and neighbours Pakistan and Bangladesh.

Devoid of heavy machinery, the workshop is filled with the thuds of hammers on leather, banging of cork into cores, and the tinkle of needle on steel as dozens of men furiously stitch together 600 balls every day. The workers are paid 5,000 rupees ($110) a month, plus performance-related bonuses. – Photos by Reuters

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