We launched the Fair Trade fashion network today with People Tree, Pants to Poverty, Gossypium, Bishopston Trading, Epona , Pachacuti and Fairy Covered.

The aims are to spread awareness of Fair Trade fashion and our work as pioneers in the industry.
Why now?
The Fair Trade cotton mark has helped cotton farmers earn a better price for their cotton. Launched nearly 5 years ago People Tree and Gossypium were involved in developing the standards with the Fairtrade Foundation, as we had already been working with Fair Trade and Organic Cotton farmer groups for over 10 years.
Carry Somers of Pachacuti explained how her work using the Sustainable Fair Trade Management System (SFTMS) of World Fair Trade Organisation has a huge impact on her producer groups in Latin America.
All the Fair Trade fashion companies use Fairtrade and organic cotton but People Tree works with artisanal groups too and a social business called Assisi Garments that transform the cotton into clothing – set up originally to provide livelihoods for deaf and mute, very low income women. If a standard for Fair Trade manufacture goes no further than the current initiatives of the Clean Clothes Campaign, ETI, etc not only would our producers lose out – it would undermine the work of these initiatives.
All the companies present agreed that we need to mainstream the idea of Fair Trade in the fashion industry and agreed to work and campaign together.
I’ll look forward to sharing more with you soon!


We are a rural womens artisans cooperative in Guerrero Mexico and members of the Fair Trade Federation since 1995, also members of IFAT International Federation of Alternative Trade since 2001. We are the creators and designers of our jewelry and produce in the home workshops of our village.
Maria Alaniz
Artesanas Campesinas
Tecalpulco Mexico
Fair Trade Goods are increasingly popular in Westernised societies because there is increasing awareness that we in the West are able to help those less fortunate than ourselves. Unfortunatlely, the global recession has led to people watching there purse strings a little more and fair trade has suffered as a result.