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Our Brands

Trusted brands using certified ethical and sustainable business practices.

Doughnut Economics Action Lab

Doughnut Economics Action Lab (DEAL) is part of the emerging global movement of new economic thinking and doing. They help create 21st century economies that are regenerative and distributive by design so we can meet the needs of all people within the means of the living planet. As an action lab, they aim to learn with and from changemakers around the world who are turning the ideas of Doughnut Economics into transformative action. In 2020, they launched the DEAL Community Platform as a space to connect, share, inspire, and be inspired. It includes a community map, member profiles, tools, stories, events, news, and other updates. The DEAL team is collaborating with cities, communities, educators, businesses, and governments on pilot projects around the world. The tools and stories that emerge from these initiatives are open access and free of charge. DEAL is a member of the Wellbeing Economy Alliance. They are registered as a Community Interest Company and reinvest all revenue towards their purpose.


Dough Rye Me

Dough Rye Me is an artisan bakery started in the SCOOP production kitchen on the island of Jersey. They specialize in wild yeast sourdough bread made with certified organic flour and other sustainably sourced ingredients. The natural slow fermentation process not only deepens the flavor of the bread, it also improves the body's ability to access the nutritional benefits of the grain and is better for gut health and blood sugar levels. Dough Rye Me provides a freshly baked local alternative to imported, mass manufactured breads available at conventional supermarkets.


Down to Earth Farm

Down to Earth Farm is creating a model for building self-sufficient communities and diverse ecosystems that support living soil and holistic health and wellness for all living beings. Their land in the Sri Lankan hill country includes frog ponds, pollinator gardens, fruit orchards, and wild spaces for natural forests to take root again. They cultivate herbs, greens, vegetables, and medicinal plants from open-pollinated or traditional heirloom seeds and make their own compost, biochar, vermicompost, liquid comfrey teas, and other natural inputs. Down to Earth Farm promotes natural building using clay, soil, sand, and other materials from the building site. They have worked with adobe bricks, lime plaster, limecrete, cob bricks, cob ceilings, and Shou Sugi Ban charred wood. They offer farm stays, workshops, and training programs on organic farming and natural building techniques. Down to Earth builds connections and shares practices to help more people grow their own food and medicine.


Dreamer & Co

Dreamer & Co offers fair trade jewelry from Kenya and the Horn of Africa with a focus on inspiring conscious consumption and empowering women through dignified employment. They partner with Riyo Rumoday, a group of women artisans that specialize in handmade paper beads. Dreamer & Co pays fair trade prices to ensure sustainable living wages and provides design support, materials, skill development, and market access. They are committed to environmental stewardship and have been working to eliminate plastic packaging, expand their range of upcycled products, and transition to environmental responsible materials and fittings.


DreamSpace Academy

DreamSpace Academy is a community innovation center in Batticaloa, an area of Sri Lanka that has been affected by natural disaster and 30 years of war. During this period, hundreds of international agencies came to the region with humanitarian aid and imported solutions. DreamSpace was started to catalyze creative mindsets and empower youth in the region to develop innovative local solutions to complex socioeconomic and environmental issues. They have labs for electronics, mechanics, software, biotechnology, business, art, and design and offer a wide range of MakerEducation workshops. Their personalized empowerment programs, called the DreamSpace Life Cycle, helps local innovators develop their ideas into self-sustaining social enterprises. They also host DreamSpace Terrace, a community cafe, Trash for Trade, a plastic upcycling business, OceanBiome, an ocean research collective, and J Matrix, a 3D modeling enterprise.


Dreamtime Artistry

Dreamtime Artistry supports the next generation of First Nations artists and creates a space where their art can be shown to the world. They offer Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander paintings, boomerangs, didgeridoo, bullroarers, pottery, weaving, jewelry, and other artwork through their outlets in Australia and their online store. Dreamtime Artistry also runs First Nations markets on the Gold Coast and facilitates Aboriginal cultural workshops, Welcome to Country ceremonies, Smoking ceremonies, and talks on Yugambeh culture. They contribute their time to local Aboriginal boards and businesses and support residential artists by showcasing their work, connecting them with clients for commissions, and facilitating artwork licensing. Dreamtime Artistry is a Supply Nation Certified Indigenous Business and a member of Queensland Social Enterprise Council (QSEC), Queensland Indigenous Business Network (QBIN), and Coralus.


Drift BnB

Drift Bnb is a centrally located bed and breakfast in Sri Lanka's capital city that is known for its artwork and plants. The mural on the front wall of the hotel is part of the Sea Walls ocean conservation project and is intended to remind people of the importance of keeping our forests and oceans clean. Drift BnB offers private rooms and affordable dormitory beds. They have a water refill station, minimize single use plastics, segregate and recycle waste, and actively support other local businesses that prioritize people and the planet.


Drift Retreats

Drift offers surf and yoga wellness retreats from a base in the Channel Islands. Their Jersey retreats operate from Kempt Tower, a restored heritage property inside a national park with 1,900 hectares of protected coastline. Meals and snacks are plant-based and made from organic and local ingredients sourced through SCOOP The Sustainable Cooperative. In addition to surf and yoga, there are opportunities for standup paddleboarding, nature walks, coastal foraging, mindfulness meditation, massage treatments, creativity workshops, and more. Drift also offers day programs, staycations, and Drift Away retreats in Portugal. Their commitment to environmental responsibility includes avoiding all single use plastic, providing eco packs and natural toiletry products, prioritizing local plant-based food, composting food waste, coordinating beach cleans, planting trees through Trees for Life in Jersey, offering opportunities for guests to offset their travel, and supporting conservation initiatives by Bukit Lawang Trust.


driverED

driverED provides affordable and accessible driving lessons and driving test support for people experiencing transport disadvantage in the northern suburbs of Melbourne. Their experienced multilingual instructors offer low-cost, culturally appropriate lessons to learner drivers experiencing barriers to obtaining their driving license due to language, income, or a limited understanding of Australia’s road laws and regulations. driverED partners with local organizations that support migrant, refugee, and humanitarian entrants who require driving lessons for employment, economic empowerment, and connection. They also help women from migrant and refugee backgrounds become driving instructors, develop their own businesses, and achieve financial sustainability. driverED is a Social Traders Certified Social Enterprise and a member of Social Enterprise Network of Victoria (SENVIC). They operate under Whittlesea Community Connections, a not-for-profit community organization founded in 1973.


Drum House

Drum House brings people together through percussion. They coordinate drum and percussion lessons, workshops, performances, and drum circles for groups of all ages. Drum House also sells drums and percussion instruments made with no animal products. Their drum workshops and drum circles contribute to listening and communication skills, creativity, team building, and connection.


Dryp Coffee

Dryp aims to make high quality Sri Lankan coffee and brew methods locally accessible. They work directly with small upcountry farms, roast in single origin micro lots, and provide transparent sourcing information. Dryp Coffee is available as cold brew, whole bean, or ground in a range of roasts. Profits are reinvested to educate their partner farmers on sustainable production techniques, harvest quality, and waste reduction. Dryp has developed their own brewing equipment as an alternative to imported plastic filter cups and single-use paper filters. Their Drypper is a clay cup designed for optimum flow rates with reusable cotton filters. They are now working to develop sustainable packaging alternatives.


DTOCS

DTOCS offers tableware from palm leaves to reduce resource use and waste and create livelihood opportunities for women in India. They supply plates, bowls, platters, serving trays, spoons, and straws made from naturally shed areca and coconut palm leaves that are collected, cleaned, pressed, trimmed, and sterilized. DTOCS provides natural, leak-proof, compostable alternatives to single-use plastic and industrial paper products. They give back by funding scholarships for disadvantaged children in the United States and India. DTOCS is certified Composter Approved by the Compost Manufacturing Alliance and certified Women Owned by the Women's Business Enterprise National Council. They are a member of Members United for Sustainable Events (MUSE) the Oregon Entrepreneurs Network (OEN), and Naturally Network.


Duapa Werkspace

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.


Dudley Silva Batik

Dudley Silva Batik focuses on preserving the batik tradition in Sri Lanka. Their workshop in Ambalangoda uses cotton, silk, fiber reactive dyes, paraffin, beeswax, and traditional dummala resin to produce unique batik shirts, sarongs, lungis, skirts, blouses, beachwear, scarves, shawls, bags, wall hangings, tableware, bed spreads, pillows, home decor, greeting cards and original artwork. Dudley Silva Batik provides living wages, meals, holiday bonuses and training for workers.


DumoWongi

DumoWongi produces herbal products, promotes sustainable agriculture, and provides income-generating opportunities for women in Kota Kinabalu, Sabah. They offer edible flowers, fresh and dried herbs, potted succulents, herb salts, superfood powders, natural soaps, herbal salves, and hydrosols. They also make eco print lanyards, coasters, hair accessories, and gift wrap from upcycled fabric printed with natural botanical dyes. DumoWongi trains and supports local women to grow herbs and edible flowers using natural farming techniques and produce herbal products. They use 10 percent of their sales for community development initiatives.


Dunhill Multi Education Centre

Suide Iol Oidis Duin Aill Cuideachta Faoi Theorainn Ráthaíochta, trading as Dunhill Multi-Education Centre, aims to be a hub of learning excellence and provide equal access to education for all from their community-owned education, training, and conference center in east County Waterford. They offer training and event facilities, meeting rooms, a library, a community garden, an onsite café, and catering services. Dunhill Multi Education Centre delivers local training initiatives and hosts more than 30 local community organizations and clubs. They maintain tiered pricing and use revenue from corporate bookings to provide discounted rates to community groups. Many training programs are free for participants in need. Dunhill Multi Education Centre is a member of Social Enterprise Republic of Ireland, Waterford Social Enterprise Network, Comhar Commeragh Network, Copper Coast Tourism Network, and Public Participation Networks.


Dunitz & Company

Dunitz & Company has been partnering with artisans in Guatemala to create hip, fair trade earrings, bracelets, necklaces, and other accessories since 1989. They are best known for their beaded jewelry, but they also offer fused glass, laser cut, and embroidered designs, as well as pieces made from recycled rubber, telephone wire, and newspaper. Priority is given to reused and recycled packaging materials. Dunitz & Company is committed to creating opportunity for people who might not otherwise have it, treating people with respect, paying fair and living wages, ensuring worker safety, and sustaining and promoting those they have nurtured. When possible, they contribute to local facilities in the communities where they work. Dunitz & Company is a member of the Fair Trade Federation, a Gold Certified Business member of Green America and a founding member of Fair Trade Los Angeles.


Dunvila Sustainables

Dunvila Sustainables has heirloom rice and jungle honey harvested using traditional methods from the area bordering Knuckles Rainforest and Wasgamuwa National Park.


Duul Coco Green

Duul Coco Green uses discarded coconut shells, husks, and leaves to create handmade housewares, planters, and habitat for birds and other living beings. Their products are hand crafted without machinery or fossil fuels and are fully compostable at end of life. Duul Coco Green creates rural livelihood opportunities in the village of Wegalla. People are able to work at home on their own schedule. They provide fair wages, emergency funds, and support for school children in need. Duul Coco Green also contributes to rural schools and tree planting initiatives.


Dwij

Dwij, which means second life in Sanskrit, rescues materials that were destined for landfills and creates unique upcycled bags, jewelry, housewares, and toys with a people-centered and earth-centered approach. They source post-consumer jeans through second-hand markets and collection drives and collect pre-consumer denim, recycled polyester felt, and other textile waste directly from industrial suppliers. All materials are carefully sorted, washed, and cut for custom designs. Dwij has their own manufacturing facilities and works with a network of women from self-help groups who need additional income to support their families. They participate in networks that promote zero waste living in Mumbai and help create a circular economy in India.