Skip to content
Now through July 7th, select clearance products are an additional 15% off the wholesale price. See discount in cart.
Select clearance is an additional 15% off through July 7th.

Your Basket (0)

View basket

Your basket is empty

Continue shopping
img
Leaf Cuff Bracelet

Add a natural motif to your capsule wardrobe with the Leaf Cuff Bracelet from Cambodia. This bracelet, made from 92% pure silver and recycled brass bomb casing, is distinctive enough to draw attention yet simple enough to match nearly any outfit. Decades of conflict have left the countryside of Cambodia littered with bombs. One by one, the makers at our fair trade partner Rajana cut and shape brass bomb casings, safely cleared by a demining agency, into jewelry - wearable statements of peace and progress.

HANDCRAFTED IN CAMBODIA

  • Bombshell brass and 92% pure silver
  • 2.75 inner width x 2.25 inner height inches
  • Handcrafted in Cambodia

SKU: 5304110

THE MAKERS

The Rajana Association is a nonprofit organization for income generation and skills training, producing fair trade products using traditional Cambodian skills with contemporary designs. The name Rajana means "design" in Khmer. Rajana Association focuses on the rural and urban poor, and small producers of handicrafts. Rajana trains young Cambodians in traditional craft–making skills, as well as in accounting, marketing, computer courses and English. Through development of traditional craft–making skills, Rajana helps maintain and rebuild Cambodia’s rich cultural traditions, damaged in the country’s wars.Rajana Association began in 1995 as an income–generating project of the British nongovernmental organization Southeast Asian Outreach UK. Since 2000 Rajana has been owned and operated by Cambodians. Ten Thousand Villages has been purchasing from Rajana since 2007.
img
img

Welcome to our global maker-to-market movement where, together with 20,000 artisans, we ignite social change. We create opportunities for individuals, families, and communities in developing countries to thrive through strong relationships, fair wages, safe working conditions, and sustainable practices.

Tenthousandvillages.com