Ethical fashion seeks to ask a different question:
What would clothing cost if every person involved was treated fairly?
A fair price includes fair wages.
It allows artisans to earn a living from their skills, support their families, and continue practising traditional crafts that might otherwise disappear. It creates opportunities for communities to thrive rather than simply survive. It recognises that handmade work carries both cultural and human value.
It also means investing in processes that respect the planet.
At The Anjelms Project, we are committed to natural plant-based dyes, handmade techniques, repurposing textile remnants and creating systems of transparency that allow our customers to understand the journey behind each garment. These decisions are rarely the cheapest or fastest options, but they are choices rooted in integrity and long-term care.
When you purchase an ethically made garment, you are not simply buying fabric and thread. You are supporting a network of makers, preserving cultural knowledge, and contributing to a fashion system built on dignity and respect.