German company Haeftling (German for “prisoner”) made international headlines with the February 2008 opening of its Berlin shop.
In an industry where where boycotts and anti-sweatshop campaigns oppose the labor practices of most luxury goods and apparel production companies, Haeftling sets itself apart.
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Haeftling also allows some creativity in the project, giving inmates the opportunity to design. The Haeftling-designed clothing is modeled after prison wear, and just constructed by the workers. But some pieces, like T-shirts, bear inmates’ original artwork.
At Haeftling’s Berlin store – and in their online shop – you can buy clothing and accessories for men and women, items for the home, and even coffee beans.
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Inmates make about 20 percent of Haeftling’s products; the rest, more complicated pieces, are made elsewhere. Between three and five percent of the proceeds of each Haeftling product benefits prisoner charities and anti-death penalty organizations, like Amnesty International and the German Initiative Against the Death Penalty.
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