Here we are again. Another busy week. We have lots of orders coming through and I am really pleased with how our Fairtrade company is doing.
When things go well we have a “company horn”. It is an old brass antique horn and if someone in the company has something to celebrate then they honk the horn! This week it got honked twice.
The first time Karen and Ros finished embroidering around 1000 fleece jackets. Whew! A real time for celebration and a good old honking of the horn.
The second time was was Ros received her Fire Marshall certificate. Ros had been on a workshop to learn all about fires, how to stop them happening, how to put them out, and how to get everyone out of the building. Everyone who has been on the course finds it very interesting. So we are looking forward to Ros teaching us all she knows.
I am looking forward to the next time someone wants to “honk our horn!”
More great news. It just seems to keep coming at the moment! Lisa has been working away with the Salvation Army on a project they have and they placed their order yesterday. We are supplying them with Fairtrade cotton t shirts and I am really pleased, of course, that they decided to use Cotton Roots.
Offering Fairtrade garments is a niche business but one I find really fascinating and fulfilling. The Salvation Army are a growing band of new customers from the charity sector that are keen to use ethically sourced clothing. On a personal note my grandmother Maud Smith who ran the public houses “The Lion” and “The Royal Oak” in Abertillery from around 1925 – 1965 would have been pleased. The Salvation Army often came to the pubs and she made them very welcome. It was tough times for the miners and their families in the valleys of South Wales and the Salvation Army did lots of supportive work. So my Grandmother, although a publican, really respected them and especially asked for them at her own funeral, a fitting tribute of mutual respect. She was a business woman, family woman, strong woman and I think she would have been proud of us supplying the Salvation Army – so it gives me an added thrill. Fairtrade T shirts, my Gran, and the Sally Army, a good combination.
We have a new customer and that excites me. Their clothing could not be Fairtrade due to their very specific requirements which is a shame – but it’s just not possible yet.
The English National Opera are performing “Idomeneo” at London Coliseum and we are supplying the costumes. A new one for us – costumes. It is a very contemporary opera so the performers will be wearing suits, shirts, and blouses which we have supplied. I have had very little involvement in this order Jenny has worked hard sending samples, and exchanging goods until the opera company was happy with everything.
I am excited about this. I have never been to the opera and I feel a trip to the Coliseum coming on for all of us at Cotton Roots. I am hoping to get some photographs from the trip and will post them on our blog! We are of course still using manufacturers who ethically make our garments.
So if you go along to “Idomeneo” in the summer look out for our uniforms. We will be there!
This link will let you listen to osme of the music and an interview with the conductor. Take a look.
Blackwood golfclub is beautiful course in the hills of South Wales and my brother in law John, is the secretary. We thought that this was a great opportunity for a golf club to be “really green” by their groundsmen wearing ethically soursed uniform. The two groundsmen are a father and son team of Alan and Owain Hughes who look after the course all year round.
We supplied them with jackets made from recycled plasic bottles and polshirts which are cerified as both organic and Fairtrade. Here they are in the photographs wearing their new “green” uniform.
I enjoyed this project, I think it’s great that a golf club decided to choose ethical clothing for their uniform. I hope more clubs follow suit……thank you Owain, Alan and of course John.
I visited India to spend some time with the people who grow the cotton for our Fairtrade Polo shirts and T shirts for schools. It started out as an adventure and was fascinating from the moment we touched down in Ahmedabad.
There were two highlights. The first was a surprise. We were talking to spinners at the large Mahima Factory when they hurried us along. We were told to hurry or the children would have already gone home. Puzzled we did indeed hurry. We were whisked away and taken to the Swayan Academy.
We were able to briefly visit each class. The children were predominantly from families who would not normally be able to send their children to school. The pupils were from the rural cotton growing communities and the school was supported by Mahima Purespun. The children were so polite, seemed a little in awe, but clearly happy. It was one of those moments in life that I will remember. As we left the school we both looked at each other and said that the whole trip was worth that one visit. The knowledge that by manufacturing Fairtrade and organic school uniform we were directly in the circle that contributed to this school and their future.
Next we squeezed again into the car and were taken by mostly bumpy tracks to a cotton farm co-operative. We had no idea what to expect and had been told the harvest had taken place. I will wite about that experience in my next blog.
Good news again! We seem to be going through a purple patch of good news. YeHa!
We have been in touch with the Soil Association and we think we can be the first “UK t shirt embroiderers to be certified as organic. Whoopee. Helen is on the case and looking into the auditing we would need to do. I have to say that the Soil Association has been so helpful and positive. We already have so many things in place I am hopeful so watch this space as we work towards the certification.
I will update the blog as we progress through the certification, the ups and downs, and try and give tips based on our experience for anyone else inerested in gaining certification.
THANK YOU to those people not only kind enough to read this blog – but to also take the time to leave such positive comments. I am so thrilled. 🙂
This is Lisa – our sales manager. You can see she is a very serious person and grabs any opportunity to sit down and mess about!
We have been saving the waste vialene, (the stuff we use behind the embroidery to hold the fabric firmly) especially for a local charity – close to the heart of Milton Keynes people. Willen Hospice does wonderful work and is very highly thought of. We were really pleased when we found that our vialene can be reused for cloth manufacture and the proceeds go to the hospice. We need a good home for all the polybags we now collect. If you have any suggestions please let me know.
Karen and Ros have been diligently saving the Vialene and now here is Lisa taking the opportunity for a sit down in comfort! Ahhhhh…..
I travelled to India to visit some of the people we talk to often, and work with, but have never met. My sister Sian came with me and after a lot of last minute excited planning we set off.
We flew to Ahmedabad in northern India in the state of Gujarat. We had lots of advice such as…….. look very confident, arrange a car to pick us up from the airport, clean your teeth in bottled water, the traffic and noise will be enormous, the poverty will hit you.
But nothing prepared us for the experience. It really was not a cliché to say it was another world. But what an exciting world. We had a wonderful, life changing time.
We stayed at first in a modern hotel which had great facilities with helpful courteous staff. The Lemon Tree Hotel. It was very western in appearance although the food was of course Indian and excellent. Maybe it was because we were two women travelling alone, or maybe our age (not young), or that we were very “fair” Europeans, but what ever the reason we caused so much interest wherever we went. Throughout our entire trip the outstanding memory I have is the kindness, interest and friendliness of the people we met. This was without exception.
At first I was like a child. I walked to the gates of the hotel and took a little brave step out onto the pavement. Just for a minute. The traffic, the horns, the camels pulling carts, the rickshaw drivers and all in a mad, mad swirl of hubbub and noise. Because we were not in a tourist area we got the full impact of a busy, intent, city with people at work. I went back inside the hotel. I have travelled to many countries Canada, Argentina, America, and many European destinations but nothing like this wonderful scary intriguing India. The guidebooks said Ahmedabad was dirty, noisy with not much reason to visit. The guidebooks were wrong, it was daunting but we would not have changed it for the world.
Karen our head of production, our guru, who can answer all questions relating to thread, embroidery, and designs is a shiny star of our team. Exceptionally thoughtful, here she is making our “lets start the day” cup of tea! Fairtrade of course. Yum.
Here we are again thinking and learning. I have had a number of telephone calls recently from parents worried about the school uniform their child has to wear made from polyester/cotton mix. The polyester content has irritated the skin of the children. Cotton is a naturally “breathable” fabric and is much kinder to the skin for both adults and children. I certainly prefer cotton and wear it myself.
I then stumbled across the following article in “Wales online”. Wales is my homeland and I enjoy keeping up with the news. The article comments on the chemicals often applied to fabric to make it especially easy to care for. It is sometimes called anti wrinkle or Teflon coated. Perfluorinated compounds are added during manufacture and the World Wildlife Fund are worried about the effect of this man-made chemical on wild life. It’s a really thought provoking article – School uniforms making children ill?
Many schools choose polyester mix fabrics so that the garments can be washed very easily. However the arguments for “just cotton” are significant, breathable, kind to the skin, wash at lower temperatures and if you add the Fairtade cotton as an extra reason then I think the decision should be a wise one.
By the way on my way home form work Wednesday a magical barn owl accompanied me for about 200 yards. It made me wonder………..what do I need to make wise choices about in my life at the moment. Dig deep Susan. But that’s for another day.