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Preserving Rural Embroidery Skills

Tuesday, 28 June 2011 02:36:34 BST

Pachacuti has always worked in some the most remote rural areas of the Andes and one of our principal aims is to create sustainable rural livelihoods for our producers.

 

embroiderer ecuadorI am in Ecuador for a few weeks, the main purpose of my trip being to explain to our Panama hat producers all of the intricate details entailed in the production of our 2012 collection.  It is our most ambitious to date, but our weavers love working on new patterns and we have already discovered that they weave our coloured panama hats faster than the equivalent hat in a natural colour!

 

My first few days were based in Otavalo, from where I could travel out to the villages to see our embroiderers, tailors and felt hat makers.  I had come prepared to work on embroidery designs as I had learnt two months ago when visiting our embroidery group that high cotton prices meant that most buyers were either taking their designs to cheaper countries, or converting to machine embroidery.

 

embroiderer ecuador 2

 

Our embroidery group, who are based about an hour north of Otavalo on a remote mountainside, had been the first of our producer groups to receive glasses and cataract operations two years ago and I was keen to hear how they were progressing.  However,  Mathilda who co-ordinates all of our embroidery, told me about her latest visits to see the group. "Every time I visit" she explained "the embroiderers ask if there are any orders from Pachacuti due to the higher Fair Trade prices paid.  If there are no orders, they would rather earn money picking tree tomatoes as the market price for their skills is so low". Realising what a huge responsibility this creates for Pachacuti, I returned to my hotel and spent the entire weekend working on embroidery designs for a dress and a blouse in black cotton, so that at least we can place orders to sell in our shop over the Autumn period. 

 

Ecuadorian cotton wears and washes so well and we get a lot of repeat customers in our shop, yet the embroidered blouses are often more of an afterthought for me after designing our hats, so I left the area with new resolve to create more embroidery designs each year so that these traditional skills do not die out. 

 

embroidery design Pachacuti

My designs are usually based on traditional Ecuadorian embroideries, updated with different elements; I may include the odd motif from Mexican embroidery, or take some influence from '50s design.  Mathilda will carefully copy out my designs onto the sleeves and yolks of garments and take these to the embroiderers, collect them a week later and sew them into the garments. 

 

I think the photograph below shows exactly what we are trying to do at Pachacuti: Mathilda sitting at her sewing machine with her field of maize and vegetables outside the window.  The family are almost self-sufficient from their land, only purchasing essentials such as flour and rice from the local shop.

 

Mathilda embroidery ecuadorAs traditional dress continues to westernise and buyers seek cheaper alternatives, these skills could be lost within a generation or two.  The region's boom days of the early '90s when everyone was exporting Ecuadorian wool jumpers, coincided with the men in the area converting to jeans and trainers instead of white trousers and alpargatas and ditching their traditional felt hat, keeping only their long plait as a symbol of indigenous identity.  Will women's dress follow this same fate?  At present almost all indigenous women in the area continue to wear traditional dress, which includes highly embroidered blouses.  Although not a pre-colonial textile art in the Andes, embroidery has been practiced in this region since it was imported by the Spanish in the 16th Century and was rapidly incorporated into traditional dress.

 

I'd always felt that we were playing our small part in preserving the traditional textile heritage of the Andes, but hearing that the embroiderers would rather earn money picking tree tomatoes than embroidering, unless that embroidery happened to come from Pachacuti, makes me realise what an incredible responsibility I have to the people and culture of this region.

 

0 Comments | Posted By Carry Somers

Travels in Caribbean, Central and South America

Sunday, 14 November 2010 15:35:09 GMT

Excited to be planning a long trip to South America, including many countries which I haven't been to in around fifteen years and some I have never visited.

south america map

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

My last journey to Guatemala, Honduras and Belize was when I was 6 months pregnant with my daughter, travelling for 2 days over a cobblestone road to reach the ruins of Copan.  That journey ended rather eventfully in a shipwreck and almost going into labour on the plane back to the UK.  If you haven't read this story, it's on my blog entry The Accidental Mumpreneur 

 

After 20 years of travelling to Latin America on a regular basis for work, I feel like it is time to fall in love with the continent again, its culture and its people and rediscover the real reason I set up Pachacuti.  I spent most of the time on my MA in Native American Studies working with PhD students (I was the only person on my Masters!) who were researching the Mayan glyphs and I'm really excited to have the chance to do some research into these areas again as part of our trip on Voyages of Discovery.  We'll be visiting the ruins of Chitchen Itza, Copan and Tikal.  Or at least I will, I'm not sure I'll be able to drag Mark away from the fantastic snorkelling opportunities off the coast of Central America.   The cruise is accompanied by a programme of lectures.  I did offer my services, but Voyages of Discovery had already filled all of the lecture posts for the trip.

 

From Cuba, where there is a Latin American Handicraft Fair taking place, we travel to Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, Belize and then to Cartagena where there is a Fashion, Accessories and Art fair on the day I arrive.  Next it's two days in Venezuela.  It's 19 years since I was last in Venezuela and I'm sorry to say that I had a really bad experience both of the country and of the men in particular, so I'm hoping that this trip will help to change my opinion of what I'm sure is a wonderful country.  Next, it's cruising up the Orinoco, then Devil's Island and up the Amazon, before finishing off with several ports of call down the coast of Brazil.  I'm particularly looking forward to travelling up the Orinoco as when I was working in Venezuela in 1991 helping to write cruising guides to the Caribbean, I was offered a fantastic job on a luxury yacht sailing up to the source of the Orinoco.  I turned it down as thought that working on the cruising guides would be a good combination of sailing on a classic yacht and more academic work, but it turned out to be the most dreadful nightmare and I jumped ship about a month later.

 

I think my problem is going to be luggage allowance as I want to bring about 10 kilos of books to keep me going for 34 days: The Latin American Fashion Reader, several books about the pre-colonial architecture of the meso-American region, as well as a novel or two.  I'm looking forward to re-reading two books which inspired me when I was sailing in South America and the Caribbean 20 years ago: Tristes Tropiques by Claude Levi-Strauss and The Saddest Pleasure by Moritz Thomsen. 

 

In addition, I'm hoping that the trip will prove an inspiration for designing my 2012 Panama Hat collection, so sketch books and pens will also need to be brought in my luggage.  Added to this, I'm planning to pick up the samples for our exciting new recycled, Fair Trade bag collection when I'm in Cartagena at the end of December.

 

I'm hoping to blog from the various ports of call as long as I can get WiFi, so look out for the journal of my Latin American Odyssey coming up from mid-December!

0 Comments | Posted By Carry Somers

Sftms Baseline Assessment In South America

Tuesday, 9 December 2008 13:46:23 GMT


Evaluation of Pachacuti's SFTMS Baseline Assessment Trip
15 October – 2 November 2008

We have recently completed our first baseline for the SFTMS (Sustainable Fair Trade Management System) with 8 producer groups in Ecuador, Bolivia and Peru. The assessments were led by Belen Sanchez, a Masters student from Ecuador who worked with us as an intern for two months over the summer and developed the tools for this work. I gave a presentation to each group about Fair Trade and the work of Pachacuti in South America and took notes throughout the process and Mark Rogers, my husband, did the Eco Mapping and took photographs of the day's activities.

The assessments took the form of 1-2 day long meetings designed to engage and elicit input from each group’s administration, employees and/or homeworkers. Each assessment involved:

1. Pre-screening in the UK- analysing market, legal, quality and customer requirements pertinent to each group
2. Fair Trade Principles Analysis– investigating producers’ understanding of and adherence to Fair Trade princples.
3. Group Structure/Organigram- defining different roles within each group to facilitate communication
4. Employees / Homeworkers Feedback- providing feedback from the workers on how Fair Trade is affecting their lives, covering issues such as Fair Wage, Training, Satisfaction with the quantity of work, Health and Safety and Satisfaction with the management of the group.
5. Production flow chart- analysing the workflow of the organisation with the aim of implementing quality control practices in the production process
6. Eco-mapping- identifying social, environmental and health and safety issues in our producer’s production processes and premises
7. Working plan- mutually identifying and prioritising actions to be implemented as a result of discussion about the above points which will improve their adherence to fair trade principles and our fair trade business relationship.

I believe that the SFTMS baseline assessment allowed us to gain a greater understanding of our producer groups and provided a basis for effectively communicating and planning our fair trade business relationship. Feedback provided by the groups generally found the SFTMS baseline assessments to be a very rewarding and educational experience for them.

A few common observances were deduced from our SFTMS baseline assessment experience.
The SFTMS:
1. Provides a structured and objective way of looking at each organisation and their FT business relationship with Pachacuti. This was the first time for many groups to sit down and take a strategic look at their business and how it works.
2. Cleared up confusion, over what is Fair Trade and the FT requirements. Remarkably, after a 7 year trading relationship with Pachacuti, one group still thought Fair Trade was a european company .
3. Helped to identify weaknesses and opportunities for improvement within each organisation and their fair trade relationship with Pachacuti. During the assessments, most organisations appointed new responisibilities to members which will improve their efficiency.
4. Gives a greater voice to the workers. By speaking directly to us without management present, workers were able to give unhindered feedback about the amount they were being paid, their health and safety, skills development and the general conditions of their work. This allows Pachacuti to have real information to assess and develop how our fair trade activities can improve the quality of our producers lives.
5. Immediate positive impacts to the health and safety of our workers. Many workers complained about the dust from raw materials, but didn’t like wearing their mask while working. We agreed with management that a new policy be implemented making workers wear masks when needed. Pachacuti has also agreed to purchase 2 professional respirators for chemical handling. We have also agreed to pay for eye tests for our embroiderers and look into ways of providing glasses for all 80 members of the embroidery group and will pay for a medical examination for our alpaca knitters who cannot afford to visit the doctor.
6. Gave us greater insight into the importance of the organisations for the participating members. We were told by one embroidery group- “We are more than a business, we are community and a family.” Another group of knitters said – “There are no chiefs here- we are all equal parts of the community. “
7. Highlighted positive environmental improvements already being made by our groups. We were very pleased to see the water filtering and recycling system of our hat producers and the solar hot water heater of our natural dye knitters. We are also exploring how we might be able fund one group’s water motor project as part of our carbon offsetting.
8. Strengthen Pachacuti’s ability to offer assistance to our suppliers. By taking an in-depth look into how our suppliers work, we were able to pass on best business practice.
9. Allows producers to direct how Fair Trade will benefit them the most. By developing an annual action plan with Pachacuti, producers prioritise and commit to activities which will strengthen their organisation.

The trip provided a valuable insight into the work of our producers and we were really pleased with the standards which we saw and the feedback which we received about the difference which our fair trade purchasing makes to the producers and their communities.
0 Comments | Posted By Carry Somers