YOUR CART

Our Brands

Trusted brands using certified ethical and sustainable business practices.

Haritha Organic

Haritha Organic is a farmers' group in eastern Sri Lanka that cultivates organically for a healthier lifestyle. They grow rice, vegetables, legumes, ginger, turmeric, aloe vera, banana, passionfruit, soursop, orange, mango, coconut, moringa, and more. Members practice companion planting and crop rotation and produce compost, natural liquid fertilizers, and pest repellents from locally available materials. Haritha Organic is verified under a local organic participatory guarantee system (PGS).


Haritha Organic Farm

Haritha Organic Farm was started to make fresh, healthy food more accessible and affordable to local people. They maintain high crop diversity, produce their own compost, liquid fertilizers, and pest repellents from natural, locally available materials, use mulch to control weeds and maintain soil moisture, and conduct trials to improve practices over time. Their Mabima farm produces organic leafy greens, vegetables, watermelon, passion fruit, banana, papaya, coconut, and more. Haritha Organic Farm is verified under an organic participatory guarantee system (PGS).


Haritha Sustain

Haritha Sustain raises awareness about social and environmental issues and provides consulting services to help businesses transition to more sustainable practices. They also help community organizations develop environmentally responsible alternative livelihood strategies, and they provide discounted services to low-income and small businesses. Haritha Sustain specializes in energy and resource conservation, green building, sustainable sourcing, waste reduction, and social inclusion.


Harpo's Marketplace

Harpo's Marketplace specializes in natural, locally made pastas, sauces, infused oils, condiments, and other pantry essentials. Local ingredients are prioritized, and all products are free from artificial colors, flavors, preservatives, and other synthetic additives. Harpo's Marketplace serves as a platform for small-scale, local food producers and provides alternatives to commonly imported processed foods. They are committed to environmentally responsible practices and offer discounts for customers that bring their own shopping bags or return glass bottles for sterilization and reuse. The retail range emerged from Harpo's Cafes and Restaurants, which has a long history of social responsibility. They provide training and employment for people referred by social service organizations, sponsor local arts, music, and theater productions, and donate to the Community Concern Center in Dehiwala, the Meth Sewa Foundation home for people with disabilities, the Heavana women's shelter, and other projects. Harpo's is a founding member of the Colombo City Restaurant Collective and is part of their Food 4 Survival program.


HASERA

HASERA is an organic farm and permaculture learning center in Patalekhet, Nepal that is dedicated to the promotion of sustainable agriculture and natural living. Since 1992, they have hosted and provided training for people from more than 100 countries, and many of their trainees have gone on to establish model farms and learning centers of their own. The farm uses local heirloom seeds, produces compost and herbal pesticides, and practices companion planting, crop rotation, and ecological pest management. They offer organic products, farmstay accommodation, organic meals, a seed bank and nursery, training programs, and farm design, organic certification, organic marketing, and thesis research services. Their Dhartimata sustainable workshop produces zero waste cloth menstrual pads. HASERA keeps prices as low as possible and offers discounts for people in need. Surplus is reinvested in local initiatives like seed fair events, community home stay programs, and local trail improvements. HASERA is certified through Organic Certification Nepal and is part of the Nepal Permaculture Group, Organic Association Nepal, and the International Permaculture Convergence Council.


HashHackCode

HashHackCode provides inclusive tech education and mentorship to all individuals regardless of background, abilities, gender, or age. They are building an ecosystem where neurodiverse individuals can learn computer programming and digital expression and access meaningful careers where they can grow, contribute, and be valued for their work. HashHackCode offers one-to-one online mentoring sessions and independent interactive learning for students that have autism spectrum disorder, attention deficit disorder, dyslexia, Down syndrome, hearing and speech impairments, and other learning challenges. The curriculum is designed to embrace the diversity of the human mind and stimulate curiosity-based learning, logical thinking, and creative problem solving. To ensure full inclusion, HashHackCode is developing a scholarship fund to support single mothers and families from marginalized backgrounds. As part of their broader community work, HashHackCode organizes the Tech Careers for Differently Abled Individuals event series and the Full Spectrum pledge where companies commit to employing individuals with autism.


Hastha

Hastha creates contemporary T-shirts, umbrellas, and housewares that are hand block printed with Indian motifs by people with special needs. They commission handmade wooden blocks from local artisans for each design. Hastha has worked with Gurukulam, a center for young people between 6 and 30 years old with autism, cerebral palsy, Down syndrome, and other special needs, to set up a block printing unit for all students and provide vocational training for young adults. Gurukulam now has their own store with students' products. Hastha aims to expand this program to other special schools and organizations through Project Block by Block. They are developing a library of donated wooden blocks that can be borrowed by schools or people with special needs and then returned to the library for others to use. Hastha uses a portion of their profits to support the education of children with special needs.


Hatch

Hatch is an incubator, accelerator, and co-working space that nurtures startups in Sri Lanka. They focus on creating a collaborative culture and ecosystem to support entrepreneurial ventures. Hatch has restored a historic building in the heart of Colombo Fort and dedicated space for enterprises that focus on social or environmental impact. They minimize resource use and waste by prioritizing reclaimed and natural materials, avoiding single-use plastics, and offering shared facilities, including flexible workspaces, meeting rooms, auditoriums and event spaces, audio visual, reprographic, and IT services, and fabrication labs. There are mentorship opportunities, workshops, and community events.


Hatch Films

Hatch Films is a social impact film and video production company that provides training, work experience, networking, and employment opportunities for diverse talent who may face barriers to working in the industry. They create equity by leveling the playing field, embed a culture of development by finding and investing in diverse talent, and facilitate safe spaces for people from underrepresented groups to meet, up-skill, and work. Hatch Films focuses on talent from the global majority, low-socioeconomic backgrounds, and LGBTQ+. They provide commercial video production, photography, animation, livestream, and branded content services and work with corporate and industry partners to diversify their recruitment processes. They offer reduced fees and support to charities and Community Interest Companies (CICs). Hatch Films is a registered not-for-profit CIC and a member of Social Enterprise UK. They reinvest all surplus towards their mission.


HattiHatti Nepal

HattiHatti recycles fabric waste into fashionable clothing and accessories and empowers women from marginalized communities in Nepal. The women have the opportunity to complete their primary education through weekly classes, learn and practice new tailoring skills, and become skilled tailors, creative entrepreneurs, and independent individuals. For every product sold, money goes into a savings account for the tailors. This money is used as initial capital when a woman decides to start up her own business. Hatti means elephant in Nepali. They use that name because elephants have big hearts, live in a herd, and always take care of each other. They strive to use the same qualities in the way they run their organization.


Hatton National Bank

Hatton National Bank was founded in 1888 to serve workers and investors in Sri Lanka's tea plantations. It is now a publicly traded company with more than 250 branches throughout the country. HNB considers sustainability the core of their corporate strategy and aims to integrate social and environmental responsibility into all business processes, stakeholder relationships, and strategic decision making. They have a long term commitment to financial inclusion and rural service provision through savings, microfinance, mobile banking, value chain financing, microenterprise and small business lending and programs like Gami Pubuduwa and HNB Grameen. The bank has taken a Green Pledge to combat climate change. This includes investment in green and energy efficient buildings, 3R waste management and sustainable sourcing policies, awareness campaigns, and a commitment to responsible lending. HNB follows the GRI Reporting Framework for economic, environmental and social performance reporting.


Hayden Flour Mills

Hayden Flour Mills is devoted to reviving, cultivating, and stone milling heritage and ancient grains through regenerative and sustainable practices. Heritage refers to grains grown before the introduction of intensive, scientific plant breeding in the 1900s, when crops were selected for flavor, nutrients, and local environmental conditions rather than profit maximization. Hayden Flour Mills focuses on drought tolerant crops and farming practices that minimize water use. Their farm is free from chemical fertilizers and pesticides, energy efficient, 100 percent solar powered, and carbon sequestering. Stone milling in small batches preserves the natural oils and nutrients of the grain, creating a more flavorful, nutrient-dense product than modern roller mills. Their current range includes Einkorn, Emmer Farro, White Sonora, Blue Beard Durum, Rouge de Bordeaux, Red Fife, Ute Nation Yellow Corn, Olotillo Blanco White Corn, Purple Barley, Raw Heritage Oats, Gazelle Rye, and Chickpea Flour. Recipes are available online and in their cookbook, The Miller's Daughter.


HDF Telwatte Women's Society

HDF Telwatte Women's Society was formed after the 2004 tsunami to support families affected by the disaster. It holds monthly meetings, has an elected management committee, is registered with the divisional secretariat, and recently opened a retail outlet in Telwatte. Members participate in a revolving loan fund which provides low interest loans and funeral assistance. They also have the opportunity to join training programs and workshops on sewing and coconut fiber products. The Women's Society sells these products through the shop and takes custom orders from socially and environmentally responsible individuals and enterprises. Members are able to work from home and are paid for their work. Any surplus is reinvested into the women's society. The Telwatte shop also serves fresh juice and snacks for locals and tourists.


Healfo Lanka

Healfo Lanka is a social venture focused on providing high value herbal health products, expanding organic agriculture practices, and creating rural livelihood opportunities for small-scale farmers. They started in Anuradhapura district because the region has been heavily affected by chronic kidney disease and the migration of women for domestic work overseas. Healfo currently works with a network of more than 500 farmers, 75 percent of whom are women, to produce moringa, turmeric, garcinia, brahmi bittergourd, lotus, ginger, soursop, curry leaf, lemongrass, and sesame for dehydrated herbal powders, teas, capsules, soaps, and oils. They sign buy-back agreements, offer financial literacy programs, and help establish banking facilities for all farmers in the program.


Healing Hands

Healing Hands offers shiatsu massage, Swedish massage, reflexology, and acupressure to reduce pain and promote well-being.


Healing Island

Healing Island produces personal care and wellness products from natural, organic, and environmentally responsible local materials. They focus on fair trade relationships with workers and suppliers. Products are handmade in small batches by a team of craftswomen and include aromatherapy oils, massage oils, essential oil blends and base oils, hair serums, soaps, face scrubs and masks, bath salts, and hand-rolled incense.


Healing The Gut

Healing the Gut teaches immune-boosting nutrition to improve life with autism, ADHD, food allergies, leaky gut, and other digestive and adrenal disorders. The program was developed by Kim Maes, a certified nutrition and wellness consultant and creator of the Cook It Allergy Free apps and website. Kim is a scientific nutritionist with degrees in human biology and exercise physiology and a Masters of Science in Nutrition. She is Board Certified with the American Association of Drugless Practitioners. Healing the Gut provides meal plans, shopping lists, and recipes that restore long-term balance, energy, and health. The goal is to give people the tools to change their lives by improving their health from the inside out.


Healing Through Love

Healing Through Love aims to shift awareness of domestic and family violence and empower survivors to grow and thrive. They provide counseling, education, and support to help individuals rebuild their lives, organize programs and events to educate and mobilize communities, and collaborate with other organizations and stakeholders to amplify their impact and reach. Their Pamper Day events in South Australia bring together local businesses and service providers to offer free massages, facials, styling, financial and legal support, and other services to survivors and their family members. Their Healing Through Love podcast invites guests to share their knowledge and personal experiences with domestic and family violence and help equip fellow survivors with the tools and techniques to emerge from abusive relationships and foster resilience and recovery.


Health Media Council

Health Media Council develops baby care products based on local Ayurvedic traditions and provides counseling, training, and educational content on maternity and childcare to support a mentally and physically healthy community. They offer programs on family planning, pregnancy, postpartum health, newborn care, breastfeeding, childhood nutrition, mental and physical wellbeing, and other health-related topics. They use a portion of profits to create free online videos and baby care guide books.


HealthOpX

HealthOpX helps remove barriers to healthcare. They provide a free mobile app and web portal to partner organizations that support refugees, non-native speakers, and underserved communities in the United States. The app can be easily customized without coding experience and enables partners to coordinate care, share translated documents and files, and improve patient engagement. Patients can use the app to find free and low-cost healthcare services, follow step-by-step checklists for a specific health intervention, access relevant medical information, and receive reminder notifications for appointments and medication.