Our Suppliers
BANJAARA garments carry the imprint of many hands, of skill, patience, and generations of craftsmanship.
Transparency isn’t a trend for us. It’s a commitment. We build long-term relationships with artisans and women-run cooperatives, ensuring that your purchase creates meaningful ripple effects far beyond the garment itself.
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Saheliwomen, India
Plant-based Dye and Block Print Artisans
Saheliwomen is a women-run cooperative based in rural Rajasthan, India. The organisation is dedicated to empowering women through sustainable and ethical fashion practices. ‘By focusing on education, career opportunities, and financial independence, we aim to foster freedom and gender equality, making sustainability more attainable.’ Saheli Women embraces the concept of earth democracy, striving to build an inclusive, diverse, and ecologically responsible community, 'Of the women, by the women, for the women.’
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Hadithi, Kenya
Kikapu Bag Artisans
Hadithi is a women-run cooperative from Tsavo, Kenya that supports over 1,900 female artisans with sustainable livelihoods. The agricultural community is situated in a semi-arid area, where harvests often fail due to a lack of rain and consequently, poverty is widespread. By partnering with Hadithi, BANJAARA aims to support predictable alternative incomes.
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Peruvian Traditions, Peru
Fair Trade Knitwear Artisans (coming soon)
Peruvian Traditions works with a community of women knitters located in the Conchucos region of the Ancash highlands in Peru.
Within the community, the work is organised collectively. A local coordinator oversees the process, distributing yarn and materials to the knitters and organising the workflow. Many of the women work from their homes, integrating knitting into their daily routines while caring for their families and households.
Working mainly with natural fibres such as alpaca, this partnership offers an important source of income for many families in the region, allowing women to contribute economically to their households while continuing to practice their cultural heritage.
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Mahila Umang Cooperative, India
Fair Trade Knitwear Artisans
Often known as the Hill Women, these craftswomen specialise in hand-knitting as a way to support their families and preserve their cultural heritage. The cooperative is made up of 50 self-help groups and provides sustainable livelihoods for around 700 women.
The Fair Trade cooperative is entirely owned by its members. This means the women receive full payment for their work without deductions from middlemen or external agencies. Our partnership reflects true fair trade values by ensuring that income flows directly to the women who create each piece. Through this relationship, traditional skills gain steady recognition while modern market access becomes possible for rural artisans. -
Channi Textiles, India
Block Print Artisans
Channi Textiles is a second-generation, family run workshop based in Jaipur, working closely with skilled hand block printers in the Bagru district. It’s here that our dabu block printing comes to life, a traditional mud-resist technique, passed down through generations. Each stage is done by hand, with a deep understanding of rhythm, material, and time. This is a craft shaped not just by skill, but by nature itself. The monsoon rains, the strength of the sun, the dust carried from nearby fields, all leave their quiet mark on the cloth. Each one carries the subtle variations of its making, a reflection of human hands, heritage techniques, and the ever-changing conditions of the natural world.