YOUR CART

Our Brands

Trusted brands using certified ethical and sustainable business practices.

Sankalpa Art Village

Sankalpa Art Village revives indigenous crafts and natural dye practices in India to create livelihood opportunities and sustainable communities. They specialize in handwoven fabric and children's clothing dyed with local herbs, toys made from naturally lacquered upcycled wood, and housewares made from terracotta, coconut shell, and recycled brass. They also offer natural food, herbal tea, and personal care products, experiential tours, and workshops. Sankalpa Art Village focuses on inclusive products that their own employees can afford. They plant seeds and saplings in deforested areas in the nearby hills.


Sans Prejudice Solutions

Sans Prejudice Solutions helps clients create diverse and inclusive workplaces, develop and retain socially representative teams, and become more innovative, productive, and resilient. They specialize in diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) strategy consulting, workshops, training, team-building days, and leadership retreats. Sans Prejudice Solutions has a rotating organizational structure that gives all employees access to shadowing opportunities, mentorship, and leadership team roles. Employees also have access to a fund that covers the cost of specialized equipment, technology, and services to support equitable participation at work. They commit 10 percent of annual profits to advancing inclusion, equity, and diversity outcomes in Australia. Sans Prejudice Solutions is a Social Traders Certified Social Enterprise.


Saola

Saola creates herbal products that support sustainable livelihoods and help protect forests, biodiversity, and indigenous culture in Vietnam. They work with local mountain communities to sustainably source medicinal herbs and produce pure essential oils, skin and hair care, beeswax candles, aromatherapy, and other natural products. Saola invests in sustainable agriculture and forestry practices. They raise public awareness and actively promote the use of local natural ingredients for human health, the environment, and the local economy. Saola is a brand of Liên Minh Xanh also known as Green Net Production and Trading.


Sapana Village Lodge

Sapana Village Lodge is located outside of Chitwan National Park in the Terai region of Nepal. Sapana, which means "dream" in Nepali, features lush gardens, authentic Tharu decorations designed by local people, a restaurant, yoga shala, and an open-air terrace overlooking the Budi Rapti River and chain-free elephants. They avoid single-use plastics, segregate waste, recycle, harvest rainwater, and grow organic produce onsite. Sapana Village promotes responsible travel experiences including jungle safaris, guided tours into Chitwan National Park, ethical elephant activities, culinary classes, yoga and wellness treatments. In 2016, the founder created a nonprofit organization, Sapana Village Social Impact (SVSI), to improve the lives of local people and help them achieve self-reliance. They have launched a range of social impact initiatives with a focus on healthcare, education, food security, sanitation, vocational training, job creation, and emergency relief to victims of natural disaster and human-wildlife conflict. Twenty percent of the hotel’s profits are used to fund Sapana School, the Women’s Handicrafts Center, and SVSI.


Sapling Vodka

Sapling Vodka is the world's first climate positive vodka. They produce in the heart of London from locally sourced British wheat and plant a tree for every bottle sold. Their goal is to reforest areas of the United Kingdom and Morocco and benefit the surrounding communities. In addition to organizing their own planting projects, they donate to groups that are working to reforest London, plant urban fruit trees, expand agroforestry, and develop livelihoods. Sapling Vodka has planted more than 11,000 trees and counting.


SAPSRI

South Asia Partnership Sri Lanka (SAPSRI) was started in 1981 to uplift the lives of vulnerable communities in Sri Lanka. They are part of an international network of development organizations that includes partners in Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan, and Canada. Their holistic approach aims to create just and equitable societies through self reliance and active community participation. SAPSRI works with marginalized rural communities on poverty eradication, regenerative agriculture, climate change adaptation, disaster risk reduction, water management, and environmental conservation. They are an accredited civil society organization of the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) and work closely with national and local government agencies to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). SAPSRI is registered as a not-for-profit voluntary social service organization.


Sara Bhumi

Sara Bhumi offers affordable traditional Sri Lankan food made from healthy, local ingredients. Products include a heen bovitiya herbal drink, katupila porridge, moringa porridge, and karapincha garlic porridge. They are committed to creating employment opportunities for people in need, benefitting the communities where they work, and protecting the environment.


Sarah Bellum's Bakery & Workshop

Sarah Bellum's Bakery & Workshop empowers adults with acquired brain injury to re-engage in the community, rebuild a sense of purpose, meaning, and identity, return to the workforce, and create baked goods for their community. Their bakery shop in Portland, Oregon specializes in cupcakes made with organic flours, organic unrefined cane sugar, organic milk, organic eggs, and organic fruit. They compost their food scraps and coffee grounds, maintain organic garden beds behind the shop, and use plastic-free compostable containers, bags, cups, lids, straws, and utensils. Surplus baked goods are donated to Urban Gleaners or local food pantries for re-distribution. Sarah Bellum's functional rehabilitation program was designed to help people with brain injury develop functional, job-ready social, cognitive, and physical skills through routine, repetition, adaptation, and individualized coaching. They create opportunities for student volunteers and raise public awareness of brain injury. Sarah Bellum's is registered as a not-for-profit organization and reinvests all surplus towards their mission.


Saraii Village

Saraii Village is a social enterprise that focuses on sustainable travel. They focus on capturing the essence of Sri Lanka and providing a unique and authentic travel experience. Visitors to their Weerawila property near Yala National Park can stay in tree house suites or mud chalets and participate in a wide range of community excursions: bike tours, lagoon fishing, pottery, traditional curd making, bird watching, cooking classes, weaving, etc. Saraii Village facilities were built with natural and upcycled materials and green construction techniques. They have a natural saltwater pool and solar pathway lighting. The restaurant does not use plastic straws or water bottles and composts all food waste.


Sarala by Namali

Sarala by Namali specializes in handmade greeting cards from responsibly sourced FSC certified paper. They want to promote a culture of sharing love and appreciation through meaningful cards and handwritten notes and letters. A portion of the profits are used to help stray dogs. Sarala by Namali has funded stray dog rescue missions, medical bills, warding expenses, and rehoming costs. They have also partnered with Iridescence Sri Lanka to provide upcycling workshops for urban kids from disadvantaged areas.


Sarala Vida

Sarala Vida was started as an ethical and sustainable slow fashion brand. They aim to make informed decisions that have a positive impact on the planet and its people and continuously improve over time. Their initial collections were made from local garment factory offcuts that would have otherwise been burned or sent to landfill. Patterns are cut to minimize waste and any remaining scrap materials are upcycled into hair scrunchies, bags, and other accessories. For future collections, they plan to partner with factories that produce GOTS certified fabrics and develop natural dye facilities. Sarala Vida provides flexible livelihood opportunities for Sri Lankan women that are unable to access traditional employment due to family responsibilities. They are able to work from home, set their own schedule for a healthy work-life balance, participate in training and internship programs, and share input on future collections. Sarala Vida uses their platform to raise awareness about the impact of fashion choices, promote other slow fashion brands, and maintain full transparency and accountability.


Sarang

Sarang helps small-scale farmers transition to alternative crops that are used for natural health and beauty products. Their current range includes moringa tea, powder, capsules, and moringa root pickles, quinoa grain and flour, multigrain flour, stevia natural sweetener, flax seed, mustard seed, and sugar cane jaggery. Through this approach, Sarang provides new livelihood opportunities for farmers and makes natural products more accessible and affordable for local consumers. They are now working with producers to transition to fully organic practices. Sarang actively participates in tree planting initiatives and fights deforestation in both rural and urban areas.


Sarba Shanti Ayog (SSA)

Sarba Shanti Ayog provides business development and social development services based on fair trade principles for Sasha producer groups and other grassroots craft enterprises. They assist with capacity building, market development, action research, information systems, social service access, micro enterprise financing, compliance and certification, and networking and advocacy. Sarba Shanti Ayog has been working with marginalized producers in eastern India since 1978 and has helped develop more than 50 fair trade enterprises that are part of the Sasha network. Members of these groups have improved skills, regular work, stable incomes, safe working conditions, savings, insurance, access to health and education, and a commitment to environmental responsibility. Sarba Shanti Ayog now shares their services and technical expertise with fair trade craft producing and marketing organizations across all regions of India. They also implement community and enterprise development projects and mobilize investment in the fair trade and artisan sectors. Sarba Shanti Ayog is registered as a not-for-profit society.


Sari Connection

Sari Connection is a social enterprise that brings together women in the north and south of Sri Lanka. They collect donated sari, mostly from women in the south, and work with war-affected women in Jaffna and Mullaithivu to upcycle them into stylish tops, pants, skirts, dresses, accessories, cushion covers, bags, and more. Sari Connection was started by PARCIC, a Japanese organization that helps people affected by violence and natural disasters recover and achieve self-reliance. The Sari Connection initiative raises awareness about upcycling and waste reduction and helps war-affected northern women earn supplemental income from home.


Sarina and District Community Financial Services

Good Market is a curated platform that brings together people creating a better world. All of the vendors on the site have been through an application and review process to ensure they meet Good Market standards and are good for people and good for the planet.


Saru Shakthi

Saru Shakthi produces bowls and spoons from coconut shells and sustainably sourced wood in southern Sri Lanka. They provide rural employment opportunities and focus on environmentally responsible products.


Sarvodaya

Sarvodaya's mission is the total awakening and wellbeing of all, from the individual to the family, the community, the nation, and the world. Sri Lanka's Sarvodaya Shramadana Movement started in one village in 1958 and expanded through community-based efforts and volunteerism. It was recognized and registered under a special act of parliament. By the late 1970s, with support from international partners, Sarvodaya had reached 15,000 villages throughout Sri Lanka. Sarvodaya continues to support the activities of more then 3,000 legally independent village societies. They also provide national services through specialized units and legally independent sister organizations that focus on specific development goals like education, community health, disaster management, microfinance, social entrepreneurship, women's empowerment, and community-based tourism. The Deshodaya unit promotes national awakening and a culture of democracy, good governance, reconciliation, and sustainable peace. Sarvodaya is supported through community donations, voluntary action, and self-financing initiatives.


Sarvodaya Woodwork

The Sarvodaya Woodwork Production Unit specializes in educational toys and school furniture made from responsibly sourced local wood and nontoxic, lead-free paints. They provide an alternative to imported plastic toys and children's furniture. Surplus revenue is used to support community development activities by their parent organization, the Sarvodaya Shramadana Movement.


Sasari Products

Sasari Products produces fresh natural spice powders and curry powders from locally sourced ingredients. They purchase turmeric, ginger, pepper, pandan leaves, curry leaves, lemongrass, cinnamon, and other raw materials from women who grow home gardens in the area. All products are free from synthetic additives and preservatives.


SASEC

South Australian Social Enterprise Council (SASEC) is dedicated to supporting and building a flourishing social enterprise sector in South Australia. They provide a voice for social enterprises, promote the value and values of the sector, inform, educate, and support members, increase collaboration, influence and shape policy agendas, and build relationships with the government, businesses, and the broader South Australian community. SASEC maintains a member directory and resource library, facilitates coaching and advisory services, and organizes meetups, workshops, conferences, and other events. They are an independent, non-political member-based peak body. SASEC works closely with Social Enterprise Australia, the national peak body, and the peak bodies for other states and territories.