Chameleon Blue
DARK BLUE DINOSAUR
Regular price
$29.00
Our collection of darling stegosaurus plush toys is always popular. This Dark Blue Dinosaur is the perfect toy for encouraging your child's imagination to wander back to prehistoric times. Handcrafted by women artisans using soft organic cotton yarn and featuring delicate stitched details, this timeless stuffed stegosaurus will make a delightful gift for a baby shower or baby's first birthday. This plush toy is durable and washable, and the rattle inside gives a very soft sound when shaken. Designed to last, this toy will be treasured by toddlers and older children as well.
- Handcrafted in Bangladesh
- Organic cotton
- 8.7"L x 3.9"H x 3"W
- Hand wash; air dry
This Fair Trade co-operative was started by a young English woman living in Bangladesh when she noticed that many of the women working in the garment factories came from distant villages and had to leave their children with grandparents for months at a time while they worked in the city. The English woman gathered a few of the local women around her and taught them how to knit and crochet small dolls and creatures that could be sold in the Western markets, with the hope of providing an alternative source of income to Bangladeshi women. These women, with the English woman's help, were then able to teach more women in their own village. From a handful there are now hundreds of women now employed making these toys while living at home in their villages. They walk to work, a central place within their village, often taking their babies with them. Together they sit, knitting and crocheting community and love together into each heirloom toy.
- Handcrafted in Bangladesh
- Organic cotton
- 8.7"L x 3.9"H x 3"W
- Hand wash; air dry
This Fair Trade co-operative was started by a young English woman living in Bangladesh when she noticed that many of the women working in the garment factories came from distant villages and had to leave their children with grandparents for months at a time while they worked in the city. The English woman gathered a few of the local women around her and taught them how to knit and crochet small dolls and creatures that could be sold in the Western markets, with the hope of providing an alternative source of income to Bangladeshi women. These women, with the English woman's help, were then able to teach more women in their own village. From a handful there are now hundreds of women now employed making these toys while living at home in their villages. They walk to work, a central place within their village, often taking their babies with them. Together they sit, knitting and crocheting community and love together into each heirloom toy.