Mielie
handbags arrive in the UK
An ethical handbag range with a fashion conscience
Spring/Summer
fashion 2009 promises to herald a splash of colour as well
as embracing the trend for all things “homemade”.
The perfect accessory to tie these trends together comes
in the form of a brand new range of handbags from South
Africa. MIELIE HANDBAGS provide a wonderful collection
of handcrafted boho chic bags, each one unique. Handwoven
from recycled materials by women of the South African townships,
with a detachable paper label signed by the weaver inside,
they have already received recognition from industry insiders
like Caroline Marx, costume designer for HSM3; Senior Year
and many other Hollywood blockbusters. The Mielie handbag
designs are beautiful, bright and bold – appealing
to the young and older alike.
The Mielie company and bags are the brainchild of Adri Schutz, a designer
from Cape Town, and together they help provide the livelihood for
some 50 people (mostly women) in Khayelitsha township who handcraft
the products that Adri designs – using recycled materials and
as little machinery as possible. Since the business started in 2002,
Mielie has enabled the staff to work from their homes in the greater
Cape Town area, some of whom have health problems such as epilepsy.
Working from home means that mothers can be with their children and
transport costs are kept to a minimum. Everyone meets once a week
to drop off completed products, check quality and receive new orders.
To make the products, Mielie employs many age-old and time-consuming
fibre-craft techniques, such as hooked rugging, crochet and knotting.
To reflect the fashion themes of Spring Summer 2009, Mielie has introduced
several ranges which will complement the season’s fashion hot
looks. The range as a whole is 100% handcrafted which reflects the
handmade theme on the catwalks this Spring/Summer. Marc Jacobs, Prada,
Anna Sui and Vivienne Westwood all showcased the “handmade” trend.
The Mielie collection also has a great choice of bags to suit several
of the key looks including the colours of the season - Neons/Pinks/Blues/Greens/Oranges
and Yellows as well as the prominent themes of dots and spots, fringing
and all things tribal.
Different designs of Mielie bag include the face, flower, bubbles, organno,
stripes, tilted blocks, vertebrae and waves ranges. There are also
several kinds of style ranging from £18 for a pencil case to £135
for an overnight bag. The seven available styles include the classic
Mielie bag, a Shelley overnight bag, a Mielie shopper, a Kiepie and
an AJ – smaller versions of the classic Mielie with slight
variation in shapes, the Mielie clutch and the pencil case.
Says Adri “To survive in a competitive market, you need to be abreast
of trends and the latest colours. We want to create a collection of bags
that reflects these fashion trends precisely so we can continue to thrive
and offer our workforce their much needed stability. Our bags are so
much more than just an accessory. Living in South Africa, you cannot
help but be exposed to poverty on all levels. Looking around me, I had
the idea of using handcrafts as a potential solution to some of this
poverty. People here are so great at working with their hands and have
the time to invest in creating desirable products for an international
market. By launching Mielie, we have the ability to create an income,
put food on the table and inspire people with what we produce. We also
wanted to connect the person wearing the bag with the person who made
it via our blog, http://fa.mielie.com. Every bag wearer is unique in
the same way every weaver creates a unique bag.”
With only 500 bags made each month for worldwide distribution, Mielie
handbags are much sought after. Bags are available through the handpicked
UK distributor – Cape Gem – whose policy is only to buy
accessories that are ethically produced. Carol Lovell, founder of
Cape Gem; “It is important to us to maintain our focus on the
cape region of South Africa and its designers and employers. So many
of the accessories bought today in the UK are sourced from developing
countries where workers are paid meagre wages. All of our suppliers,
where they employ local people, pay fair wages as a minimum. Cape
Gem aims to also plough back some of its profits going to Mielie
to aid Mielie projects. However we won’t be short changed on
style.
Our pieces must be eye popping, individual and cool - items that women
would wear, at an affordable price. To see celebrities like Vanessa Hudgens
with a Mielie bag is a wonderful boost for the bags and all that they
stand for.”
So with the UK and the rest of the world’s appetite for the bags
about to be whetted, the literal meaning of the word Mielie takes on
even greater significance. Mielie is Afrikaans for the word corn and
corn is the staple diet of most South Africans, and probably the first
item on most of the weavers’ shopping list. The hooked rug products
also feel like kernels on a corn cob.
As well as providing an ethical wage for the workers, the company has
made the decision to make very little profit themselves – with
any profit ploughed back/reallocated into projects to help improve
the living standards of the weavers and their community. Mielie's
food garden in Khayelitsha to create an organic vegetable patch made
by the Mielie crafters to combat the soaring food prices, the wholly
Mielie funded nursery school and the drive to provide fire extinguishers
for respected and reliable members of the Khayelitsha township community
to help prevent fires spreading are great examples of the good being
done.
You will love your Mielie handbag – the way it looks, how it makes
you feel and the contribution it makes. Get your bag online at www.capegem.co.uk.
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