Reused rice and spice sacks

The rice bags are made from woven polypropylene. It is sturdy material that we are reusing since rice bags are not allowed to be refilled with rice again. While the sacks are widely reused but downgraded as trash bags or similar we love upgrading them into all kinds of bags and accessories. Spices are stored in the good old gunny/hessian/saku/burlap/jute sacks. Locally reused to dry ones feet when stepping into a house we believe they deserve a longer life. The various and funky prints make each product unique. both material are washed before they are tailored into a new life

Hand loom fabrics

It does not get any more low carbon foot print when it comes to weaving fabrics. With our women powered looms we make fabrics from cotton yarn. While we are still using non organic cotton at the moment we are planning to switch to organic cotton in 2022. The looms can create a variety of patterns and even textures. We are proud to have managed to make the first hand woven fabric from recycled plastic bottles. The bottles are collected by our WLAB project and spun into yarn by Eco Spindles. All in Sri Lanka, connecting high tech with cottage industry.

Reused saris

Worn in different styles in all of Sri Lankan this seemingly endless piece of fabric makes a great material to reuse. Like all clothing it goes out of fashion. Time for us to sharpen the scissor and get to work. Goes without saying all products are unique!


Recycled plastic

Plastic pollution is probably one of the biggest challenges we are facing in the future. It is an amazing innovation and modern life is hardly imaginable. But how we misuse and waste this material is truly mindboggling. With our WLAB project we collect waste plastic from business and from the beach and turn it into useful object. Why not all buttons are made of recycled instead of virgin plastic? It is costly to recover but we love the look and are happy every time we can avoid buying virgin buckles but just squeeze some out ourselfs!

Loofah

What and amazing vegetable! The creeper grows pretty much wild in our area and we didn’t even now about how useful it is. Harvested at a young age the fruit can be eaten but left to dry up on the vine it develops a fibrous inner structure. The dried loofah fiber gets very soft and sponge like when wet and dries up quickly. Why someone should use synthetic kitchen when nature provides us with these makes no sense. We are working with the permaculture farm of a local hotelier to bring you these at scale and rid you of everything plastic when washing up.

Fishing rope

This sturdy ropes are made to last but often end up burned or buried on the beaches when they become to entagled to use. We purchase those nets from fishermen and get to work with our weaving skills!

upcycled spice sack
Handloom
recycled plastic
Fishing rope