YOUR CART

Our Brands

Trusted brands using certified ethical and sustainable business practices.

Dhoonki

Dhoonki works with Indian weavers, artisans, and tailors to create sustainably sourced women's clothing and accessories. They specialize in handwoven textiles, like naturally grown local kala cotton and soy protein fabric, colored with azo-free and natural dyes. Scrap materials are upcycled into bags and accessories to minimize waste. Through their Conscious Wardrobe program, Dhoonki accepts back used clothing and provides green points for a 10 percent discount on a future purchase with the goal of fostering conscious clothing choices and reducing fashion waste. Dhoonki partners with SakalpTaru to plant trees for every purchase.


Diabetea

Masbedda Mint Diabetea is a supplementary herbal drink developed for diabetics by Indrani Ceylon Tea. It contains green tea, mint, and Gymnema sylvestre, an herb that is used in traditional Ayurvedic medicine to control blood sugar, support weight loss, and treat gastritis and arthritis.


DIA Handcraft

DIA specializes in handmade home decor made from upcycled waste and environmentally responsible materials. They collect used glass bottles from local hotels and use non-toxic paints and finishes. They also make candles from soy wax and essential oils.


Dias & Sons Bamboo

Dias and Sons is a family business that started in 1925 in Kalutara, Sri Lanka. They specialize in custom blinds, shades, mats, and bags made from bamboo, cane, and coconut ekel and work with more than 50 rural producers in the nearby village of Kimmanthudawa. Bamboo blinds extend tropical living spaces, contribute to passive cooling, and provide protection from sun, wind, and rain.


DIG Cooperative

DIG Cooperative protects and conserves freshwater in the greater San Francisco Bay Area and helps create a water secure future for generations to come. They design and build systems for rainwater catchment, greywater irrigation, fire protection, flood mitigation, and groundwater management. They also install and maintain Hydraloop water recycling products and offer rainwater and greywater do-it-yourself kits. DIG Cooperative views each site as a whole-system organism and follows permaculture design principles, which are derived from observations of nature and Indigenous traditions. They provide occasional pro bono and discounted services to schools and nonprofit community organizations with aligned values. DIG Cooperative is a worker-owned cooperative and a Network of Bay Area Worker Cooperatives (NoBAWC) member.


DigiSwasthya Foundation

DigiSwasthya Foundation leverages technology to make healthcare services affordable and accessible for rural communities across India. They operate safe and hygienic telemedicine centers in rural areas, organize teleconsultations with doctors from Tier 1 hospitals, and provide referral pathways for patients. Their onsite patient navigators measure vitals using digital devices, share them with the doctors, facilitate consultations through the telemedicine platform, generate an electronic medical record, print prescriptions, and translate instructions if needed. The DigiSwasthya network of healthcare professionals includes doctors across all specializations and languages. They connect patients with pro bono or subsidized healthcare services, diagnostic labs, and pharmacies. The DigiSwasthya team offers weekly webinars and goes village to village to organize awareness camps and educate people about how to access affordable services through the telemedicine centers. DigiSwasthya Foundation is part of Social Venture Partners (SVP) India, Augnito, Empower Pragati, and Spreading Smiles of Joy. They are registered as a Section 8 not-for-profit organization and reinvest all surplus towards their social mission.


Digital Lions

Digital Lions is a fair trade digital agency that offers high quality creative services at great rates while creating income opportunities for young professionals in underserved, marginalized communities. The agency operates from a solar-powered, passively cooled IT campus on the shore of Lake Turkana in Kenya and is supported by volunteer professionals from around the world. Services include web development, logos, graphic design, image editing, videos, animation, 3D modeling, social media content, and more. They offer climate positive web hosting with server-related emissions offset by 300 percent. Digital Lions keeps overheads low and pays fair trade wages that are well above local living wages. Profits are reinvested into the education of additional digital creatives through their non-profit sister organization, Learning Lions. When Digital Lions team members feel confident coordinating directly with clients, an incubator called Startup Lions provides them with the necessary funds and tools to launch their own initiative and become economically independent. Digital Lions is a guaranteed member of the World Fair Trade Organization (WFTO), a member of Social Entrepreneurship Netzwerk Deutschland (SEND), and a supplier of Weltladen Dachverband.


Digital Lounge

Digital Lounge provides digital solutions for businesses and organizations that help others. They specialize in branding, print design, website development, software and app development, systems integrations, search engine optimization (SEO), and digital consulting. Digital Lounge works with community transport providers that serve people with disabilities and the elderly, health and wellness organizations, nonprofits, and other purpose-driven organizations.


Dignity Partnership

Dignity Partnership facilitates the inclusion and integration of new communities in Irish society with a focus on promoting growth mindsets, addressing limiting beliefs, and nurturing human capital. They provide workshops, training, mentoring, internship opportunities, events, and other support services for refugees and asylum seekers, organize events that promote social cohesion and integration, and help community workers and support organizations better understand the experiences of refugees and international protection applications. Dignity Partnership is a member of Social Enterprise Republic of Ireland, Laois Integration Network, and Community Education Network. They are a not-for-profit organization and reinvest all surplus towards their mission.


Digo Living

Digo Living produces natural products that promote sustainable living, reduce plastic waste, and support women artisans in Nepal. They specialize in cloth bags made from hemp, jute, unbleached cotton, and upcycled materials. The bags can be custom printed and ordered wholesale as an alternative to plastic packaging materials and shopping bags. Digo Living also produces felted wool dryer balls, which reduce drying time and replace single-use dryer sheets. They employ women from low-income communities and are committed to providing fair wages, safe and comfortable working conditions, and opportunities for training and development.


Dili

Dili creates handmade sculptures from natural clay and nontoxic paints. Themes include Sri Lankan wildlife, culture, and rural people. They source materials from environmentally responsible suppliers and use biodegradable or recycled packaging. The pieces are air dried to reduce energy consumption. Dili offers free art classes to children in the surrounding community and aims to help other rural artisans with online marketing.


Dingley Village 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.


Diriya Aruna

Diriya Aruna is a service program that was started by the Faculty of Medical Sciences at the University of Sri Jayawardenepura in 1997. Each year, the university students raise funds to develop a science laboratory for a disadvantaged school. The mission is to ensure that all children, regardless of where they were born, have access to an excellent education. Diriya Aruna is under the guidance of the dean and academic staff at the Faculty of Medical Sciences at the University of Sri Jayawardenepura.


Diriya Farm

Diriya Farm raises chickens according to free range standards and sells eggs in their local community. The pasture area is a home garden with shade, vegetation, access to fresh water, and protection from predators. The birds have enough space for natural behavior. Poultry litter is donated to local farmers as organic fertilizer. Diriya Farm works with Sri Lanka Human Development Foundation to promote natural farming techniques and reduce carbon emissions. They are verified free range under a local participatory guarantee system (PGS).


Diriya Organic

Diriya Organic is a farmers' group in eastern Sri Lanka that promotes organic cultivation for healthy future generations. They grow seasonal vegetables, legumes, ginger, turmeric, aloe vera, banana, papaya, lime, orange, guava, soursop, woodapple, mango, coconut, jackfruit, and moringa. Members save seeds and produce their own compost, biochar, and organic inputs. Diriya Organic is verified under a local organic participatory guarantee system (PGS).


Disabilities Swashakthi Foundation

Disabilities Swashakthi Foundation is a membership organization for people with disabilities following accidents, injuries, or illness. Most members are wheel chair bound and some are quadriplegic with all four limbs paralyzed. They focus on financial, social, and psychological self empowerment. Members produce upcycled cards, bags, key tags, and other crafts to generate income. They contribute 10 percent of profits to support quadriplegic members who are unable to engage in the income generation activities. Disabilities Swashakthi Foundation engages in activities in rehabilitation hospitals and wards to encourage other people who are differently abled. They highlight and celebrate members' capabilities.


Disala

Disala produces batik clothing, accessories, and housewares to preserve cultural heritage and uplift and empower rural women in Paduwasnuwara, Kurunegala. They showcase the skills and creativity of women artisans and provide training, market access, and sustainable income. Disala uses azo-free dyes and onsite wastewater treatment tanks. Treated water is reused for gardening, and the dye waste is sent to a waste management facility for further processing. Disala operates the workshop as a community enterprise. Surplus is distributed to participating women, and a revolving loan fund is under development.


Dis-CapaciTodos

Dis-CapaciTodos creates a more inclusive and conscious society in Mexico by promoting the rights, autonomy, and visibility of people with disabilities through innovation, education, and collective action. They specialize in inclusion training and workshops, accessibility evaluations, business consulting, and public awareness campaigns, conferences, and events that amplify voices from the disability community and promote a narrative of autonomy, dignity, and potential. Dis-CapaciTodos is led by people with disabilities, rooted in lived experience, and driven by social innovation. They actively work with low-income communities and small businesses to make inclusion affordable and practical. One of their flagship projects is a Verified Accessibility Map, which identifies inclusive businesses and provides them with visibility, training, and affordable inclusion tools like accessible signage, braille menus, and sign language resources. Dis-CapaciTodos leverages their community of people with disabilities, caregivers, allies, and social entrepreneurs to amplify causes and mobilize support for crowdfunding campaigns and other disability-focused initiatives.


Disna Foods

Disna Foods focuses on traditional, healthy village food at affordable prices. Menu options include rice and curry, rotti, manioc, and Ceylon tea. Unique specialties include healthy gluten-free jackfruit kottu and roti made with rice flour and green gram. Disna Foods offers a range of ground, roasted, and packaged spices that were developed with community support to benefit people in need.


Diverse Edge

Diverse Edge fosters equity and inclusion within the infrastructure and construction sectors and delivers economic and social benefits to First Nations people, survivors of family violence, at-risk youth, and other disadvantaged people in Australia. They work with construction companies and subcontractors to align projects with social impact objectives, increase supplier diversity, recruit and develop a skilled and diverse workforce, and increase engagement and collaboration with local communities. Diverse Edge also provide skills training and employment pathways for disadvantaged job seekers who want to work in the construction industry. They are a Social Traders Certified Social Enterprise and a member of the Queensland Social Enterprise Council (QSEC).