Europe's 2026 Heatwave Is Breaking Records
Here's what people are getting wrong about staying cool — and what India has known for 450 years
44°C in France. 41°C in Germany. Records shattering across 14 countries. When the whole continent is overheating, the answer isn't air conditioning. It's what you wear.
I run a textile house in Rajasthan, where 45°C summers are not a news event. They are June. Every year, without exception, we dress for extreme heat — and we have for centuries. So when I watch Europe's 2026 heatwave unfold in real time, shattering records from Portugal to Poland, I'm not surprised by the temperatures. I'm surprised by how many people in the middle of it are still wearing polyester.
🌡️ 44.3°C — New June record in France (Pulluau, 24 June 2026)
🌡️ 41.9°C — All-time record in Czech Republic (Doksany, June 2026)
🌡️ 39.4°C — First-ever "super-heatwave" in the Netherlands
💀 1,300+ excess deaths recorded since 21 June (WHO, 28 June 2026)
🌍 150+ million people impacted across the continent
Sources: WHO, WMO, Euronews, Wikipedia / 2026 European Heatwaves, Severe Weather Europe
Europe Is the Fastest-Warming Continent on Earth
This is not a summer anomaly that will be forgotten by September. The World Meteorological Organisation confirmed that Europe is the world's fastest-warming continent, heating at roughly twice the global average. The WHO's Director-General described extreme heat as a "silent killer" and called on European governments to implement heat-health action plans as a permanent fixture, not a crisis response.
What that means practically: this is not a one-summer problem. The 14 countries that broke temperature records in June 2026 will face the same conditions — or worse — in the summers ahead. And the infrastructure question — how do people who are not used to sustained extreme heat actually cope with it — is one that fashion has a more direct answer to than most industries want to admit.
The Fabric Answer Nobody Is Talking About
The fast fashion industry has spent thirty years building a global wardrobe out of polyester. It's cheap, it's colour-fast, it photographs well in a studio. What it doesn't do is breathe. Polyester is a petroleum-derived synthetic fibre with a closed, non-porous structure. It traps heat and moisture against the skin — exactly the opposite of what the human body needs when ambient temperature is pushing 40°C.
In Rajasthan, where we have managed 45°C summers for centuries without widespread air conditioning, the answer to extreme heat has always been the same: natural fibre, loose weave, breathable construction. Specifically, pure cotton. The physics is simple — cotton's open fibre structure allows air to circulate and moisture to evaporate, which is how the body actually cools itself. You cannot improve on that mechanism by wearing a synthetic.
| Property | Pure cotton (natural) | Polyester (synthetic) |
|---|---|---|
| Fibre structure | Open, porous, natural | Closed, non-porous, petroleum-based |
| Airflow | Allows circulation | Traps heat against skin |
| Moisture | Absorbs and wicks away | Traps sweat, causes discomfort |
| Dye type | Natural dyes — no toxic residue | Synthetic dyes — chemical compounds on skin |
| Longevity | Softens and improves with washing | Fades, pills, degrades over time |
What 450 Years of Dressing for Extreme Heat Actually Looks Like
The hand block printing tradition practised in Bagru by the Chhipa artisan community isn't just a craft. It's a clothing system built around one of the world's most extreme climates. Every element of it — the fabric choice, the dye process, the loose, flowing silhouettes — evolved in response to heat.
Pure cotton is printed with natural dyes extracted from plants and minerals: madder root, indigo, harda seed, pomegranate rind. No synthetic compounds sit against the skin. The fabric has been washed, mordanted, and dried in the same 45°C Rajasthan sun the wearer will eventually stand in. It has, quite literally, been tested in the conditions it's designed for.
A hand block printed cotton saree or a block printed cotton suit set is not ethnic wear. It's climate-appropriate clothing. That distinction matters more now than it did a decade ago, when "ethnic" was a style category. In a 44°C summer, it's a functional one.
"India has been dressing for 45°C summers for centuries. The answer was never a synthetic. It was always cotton — grown from the earth, dyed with plants, worn loose. Europe is about to learn this."Saloni Agrawal — Founder, SA Fab
Why Block Print Specifically — Not Just Any Cotton
Cotton is a broad category. A fine hand block printed cotton from Bagru and a mass-produced cotton-polyester blend from a fast fashion retailer are not the same thing, even if both say "cotton" on the label. What distinguishes genuine Bagru hand block print is the dye process — no synthetic chemicals applied to the fabric surface, no AZO compounds sitting against the skin that research has linked to dermatological irritation — and the quality of the weave, which in pure cotton is open and breathable by design rather than by marketing claim.
If you want to understand the full printing process — why natural dyes are applied the way they are, and why it produces a different fabric outcome than synthetic printing — our complete guide to hand block print covers every step. And the broader story of why Bagru specifically has been producing this fabric for 450 years is in the story of Bagru print.
This Is Also a Style Argument, Not Just a Comfort One
Natural fibre, bold print, loose silhouette — this is what hot-weather dressing looks like when it's done well. The global appetite for printed cotton in summer has been growing consistently, and the heat wave now baking Central Europe is making that argument urgent rather than aspirational.
A block printed cotton kurta for men or a printed cotton suit set for women does not look like heat-management clothing. It looks deliberate. It photographs well. It has a craft story attached to it that a polyester blend from a fast-fashion supply chain simply doesn't. And when the temperature outside is 41°C, it also keeps you significantly more comfortable for significantly longer. If you want to explore the full range — from fabric by the metre to finished garments — our Dabu print fabric and Ajrakh print fabric both ship worldwide, and our worldwide delivery means Europe is not a market we can't reach.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why is pure cotton better than polyester in extreme heat?+
How does hand block printed cotton differ from ordinary cotton clothing?+
Does SA Fab ship block printed cotton clothing to Europe?+
What makes Bagru's approach to hot-weather clothing different?+
Dress for the Heat the Way Rajasthan Always Has
Pure cotton. Natural dyes. Hand printed in Bagru. Worldwide delivery available.
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Saloni Agrawal is the Founder of SA Fab, an ethical textile manufacturing house bridging the gap between Jaipur's 450-year-old handblock printing heritage and modern sustainable fashion. Working directly on the ground with master artisans in Bagru, she is on a mission to preserve authentic, zero-waste Indian dye techniques while making luxury, artisan-crafted ethnic wear accessible to a global audience.
