45 products
45 products
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Asociación Maya
Autumn Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Autumn Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Autumn Rainbow Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Autumn Rainbow Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Black Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Black Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Black, Gray and Beige Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Black, Gray and Beige Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Black, Gray and Beige Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68 (Copy)
3900
Asociación Maya
Black, Gray and Beige Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68 (Copy)
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Black, White and Grays Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Black, White and Grays Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Blue, Grays and Black Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Blue, Grays and Black Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Blue, Green, Burgundy and Gray Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Blue, Green, Burgundy and Gray Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Blue, Orange and Gray Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Blue, Orange and Gray Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers have been gobbling these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is unique!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are transported to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The woman puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of he loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The fringes are then finished, full quality control is done, and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. If your scarf is open-weave, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. If your scarf is open-weave, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Blue, Teal, Black and Purple Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Blue, Teal, Black and Purple Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Blues and Purples Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Blues and Purples Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Blues Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Blues Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Blues with Dark Gray Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Blues with Dark Gray Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Browns and Black Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Browns and Black Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Denim (Blue, Black, Cream and Gray) Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Denim (Blue, Black, Cream and Gray) Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Emerald Green and Sapphire Blue Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Emerald Green and Sapphire Blue Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Fuchsia, Olive and Purple Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Fuchsia, Olive and Purple Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Gold, Orange, Coral and Purple Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Gold, Orange, Coral and Purple Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Golden Autumn Lightweight Bamboo Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
4400
Asociación Maya
Golden Autumn Lightweight Bamboo Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
4400
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting.
Asociación Maya
Gray, Gold and Black Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Gray, Gold and Black Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Greens, Blue, and Coffee Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Greens, Blue, and Coffee Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Greens, Brown and Copper Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Greens, Brown and Copper Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Lime Greens Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Lime Greens Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Magenta and Purple Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Magenta and Purple Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
New Autumn Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
New Autumn Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Olive with Beige Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Olive with Beige Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Orange, Blue, Burgundy and Olive Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Orange, Blue, Burgundy and Olive Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Orange, Peach and Yellow Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf, 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Orange, Peach and Yellow Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf, 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Pale Blue, Lilac, Jade and Beige Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Pale Blue, Lilac, Jade and Beige Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Asociación Maya
Pale Greens and Beige Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Asociación Maya
Pale Greens and Beige Lightweight Bamboo Open-Weave Handwoven Scarf 8 x 68
3900
Soft like butter! Our customers gobble these up!
Skeins of bamboo thread made from organically-grown* bamboo fiber in China are hand-dyed in four to six colors, in small batches. All these colors show up in the fringes and in a unique jaspe pattern throughout the scarf. (Each scarf is one-of-a-kind!) The thread for each scarf is then warped on a warping board. Warps are taken to the villages where the weavers live and distributed. The weaver puts the warp on a backstrap loom, attaches one end of the loom to a tree or house, and the other to a strap going around her waist. She hand weaves the scarf, stopping from time to time to cook or care for her children. When the weaving is completed, the fringes are hand-knotted, the scarf is hand-washed, and fabric softener added during the rinse. The weaving is then dried in the sun. The quality-control team finishes the fringes, inspects the entire weaving and the scarf is packed to send to A Thread of Hope!
* Bamboo thread is not manufactured in Guatemala. For that matter, virtually no thread is manufactured in Guatemala. The vast majority of cotton thread also comes from far away -- India. (The most arable land in Guatemala is used for export crops such as pineapples, bananas, and African palm oil for biofuels. Severe maldistribution of arable land in Guatemala is a significant problem, with one impact being the 4th highest rate of child malnutrition in the world.)
Product Care
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.
Hand wash in cold water with mild soap such as hair or baby shampoo, and rinse with fabric softener. Hang to dry. Iron as needed, using rayon setting. With open-weave scarves, be careful not to get the tip of the iron caught in the weaving.