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GoodWeave Launches Ethical Rug Source Book
February 24,
2010 by in UnCategorized
By Home Furnishings Business in Rugs on February 25, 2010
RugMark USA, the nonprofit working to end child labor in the carpet industry, is publishing the GoodWeave Rug Sourcebook, a hands-on tool for designers looking to source ethically produced, handmade rugs.
The Sourcebook will list more than 70 North American rug companies whose products carry the GoodWeave label, independently certifying that their rugs are child-labor-free. The book will be introduced at the GoodWeave booth (space 774) at the Architectural Digest Home Design Show, which will be held at Pier 94 in New York, March 18-21.
Since RugMark USA began in 1995, the number of children trapped in exploitative carpet-making work has dropped from 1 million to 250,000. Educational programs funded by certified rug sales and donations provide former child laborers and at-risk children with rehabilitation, daycare, formal schooling, vocational training and other essential services.
"Even though many of us don't realize it, we as designers have a choice to make every time we recommend a rug to a client: will we fight child labor or will we support it?" said Betty Wasserman, New York City-based interior designer and RugMark USA board member. "I've been a designer for nearly 15 years, and I'm still amazed at how easy, and yet so incredibly powerful, that choice is."
"Designers are so essential to advancing GoodWeave's work," said Nina Smith, executive director of RugMark USA. "By making their clients aware of this issue and advising them on the importance of purchasing child-labor free rugs, they can have a significant impact on the lives of children who are being exploited."
After introduction at the show, the source book will be distributed to thousands of other designers across North America.Interior designers can receive free copies by e-mailing here.