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How is it good for people & the planet?

Ethically Made by Artisans in Cambodia

Fights Human Trafficking

Made with Locally Sourced & Upcycled Materials

Description

Malia Designs increases economic opportunity for women in Cambodia and supports organizations that fight human trafficking in Southeast Asia...
See All Malia Designs increases economic opportunity for women in Cambodia and supports organizations that fight human trafficking in Southeast Asia. Their fair trade fashion products are made by small social enterprises that employ talented artisans, primarily at-risk women and the disabled. Through these partnerships they connect makers to Western markets, expanding their access to sustainable income and safe and dignified working conditions. Materials are sourced locally and often upcycled.

How is it good for people & the planet?

Ethically Made by Artisans in Cambodia

Fights Human Trafficking

Made with Locally Sourced & Upcycled Materials

Description

Malia Designs increases economic opportunity for women in Cambodia and supports organizations that fight human trafficking in Southeast Asia...
See All Malia Designs increases economic opportunity for women in Cambodia and supports organizations that fight human trafficking in Southeast Asia. Their fair trade fashion products are made by small social enterprises that employ talented artisans, primarily at-risk women and the disabled. Through these partnerships they connect makers to Western markets, expanding their access to sustainable income and safe and dignified working conditions. Materials are sourced locally and often upcycled.

How is it good for people & the planet?

Ethically Made by Artisans in Cambodia

Fights Human Trafficking

Made with Locally Sourced & Upcycled Materials

Description

Malia Designs increases economic opportunity for women in Cambodia and supports organizations that fight human trafficking in Southeast Asia...
See All Malia Designs increases economic opportunity for women in Cambodia and supports organizations that fight human trafficking in Southeast Asia. Their fair trade fashion products are made by small social enterprises that employ talented artisans, primarily at-risk women and the disabled. Through these partnerships they connect makers to Western markets, expanding their access to sustainable income and safe and dignified working conditions. Materials are sourced locally and often upcycled.

How is it good for people & the planet?

Handcrafted by Artisans in Emerging Markets

Preserves Indigenous Culture & Crafts

Promotes Fair Wages & Ethical Employment

Description

Ten Thousand Villages is a pioneer of fair trade. The original TTV effort (called Overseas Needlework and Craft) was founded by Edna Ruth By...
See All Ten Thousand Villages is a pioneer of fair trade. The original TTV effort (called Overseas Needlework and Craft) was founded by Edna Ruth Byler as a program of the Mennonite Central Committee. In the late 1940s, Byler traveled to Puerto Rico and met women who were unable to feed their children. She asked them if she could take their needlework art and textiles back to Ohio, sell them and send the profits back to them. Thus sparked the idea for a global maker-to-market movement. TTV is clear in its mission to break the cycle of generational poverty and ignite lasting, positive social change. At TTV, you can trust that every purchase directly impacts the life and community of its maker in a developing country.

Denim Medium Tote

$ 60.34 (USD)

How is it good for people & the planet?

Ethically Made by Artisans in Cambodia

Fights Human Trafficking

Made with Locally Sourced & Upcycled Materials

Description

Malia Designs increases economic opportunity for women in Cambodia and supports organizations that fight human trafficking in Southeast Asia...
See All Malia Designs increases economic opportunity for women in Cambodia and supports organizations that fight human trafficking in Southeast Asia. Their fair trade fashion products are made by small social enterprises that employ talented artisans, primarily at-risk women and the disabled. Through these partnerships they connect makers to Western markets, expanding their access to sustainable income and safe and dignified working conditions. Materials are sourced locally and often upcycled.