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Sunday, 19 September 2010

OFFSETTER PAMELA, UK | Interview with co-op, Isan silk weavers...

Pamela, Offsetter and passionate ethical advocate with particular interests in sustainability, photography, design and textiles, talks to Rosanne Trottier, CEO of Sawang Boran, a social enterprise supporting cottage weavers in north-eastern Thailand.


Sawang Boran and the Isan silk weavers – A social community business in Thailand

Rosanne is a traditional "knowledge anthropologist" turned business person.  She collaborates with weavers of the north-eastern Thailand region, OfIsan, in order to sustainably develop their hand woven products through cultivating artisanal knowledge and excellence, natural colours and fully organic processes.

Golden Isak Silk: The raw material for all Sawang Boran products.

©(2010)Sawangboran
Rosanne’s adventure with the community of Sawang Boran started when she was given a length of Isan silk, a gift of love and art made specially for her.  The story since, is one of a social business to revitalise and honour a deep artisanal culture, when modernity has already modified much of traditional life.

The village community Sawang Boran works for, is one of many silk-producing villages in the province of Khonkaen, source of some of the best silk in Thailand – if not in the world. The raw silk, typically yellow (see picture above), produces exceptionally soft, strong and shiny yarn best woven on hand-looms as it is not very amenable to mechanised processing. The designing, dyeing and weaving skills of Isan women make up one of the world’s valuable repositories of ikat creativity, in a remarkable, and complex, female culture.

Sunday, 12 September 2010

Ladies & Gentleman, we bring you .... fish leather!!!

Fish Leather ... an amazing, ethical material on the fashion scene... and now in the Offset Warehouse Fabric shop.




© 2010

Fish leather including cod, salmon, ling and haberfish, have been transformed from disregarded waste to highly popular materials for products.  Salmon skin, for example, is used for the manufacturing of many fashion and interior products including cushions, clothing and shoes.  Fish skin is maluable, soft, aethetic and breathable, furthermore, it's extremely durable, which adds to its sustainable quality!  Their small size (in comparison to cowhides) makes them particularly perfect for smaller items like hand made shoes, gloves and purses.  
 
Fish leather is made from by-products of the commercial fish industry.  Because the fish are in abundant supply and we would only disregard the skins once consuming the meat, it's considered a very sustainable and ethical choice.  The leather is tanned by soaking the hide to remove the flesh before strengthening removal of odour.  Thanks to the scales, the tanning process is not designed to remove hair, and therefore does not need the polluting chemicals used in traditional tanning. 
 
We're extremely excited to be stocking fish leathers in the Offset Warehouse Fabric Shop, in a huge range of fantastic colours!



© 2010


Offset Warehouse sells ethical fabrics of all sorts in our Fabric Shop and Haberdashery.


You can also access ethical freelancers from all sorts of creative disciplines for free, by visiting Offset Warehouse's Ethical Directory, and fully realise your creative visions!


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