Collection: Fair Trade Bracelets

Fair trade bracelets are bracelets produced under verified sourcing standards requiring fair wages and safe working conditions. Bracelet production involves wire work, bead stringing, metalforming, weaving, and hand-knotting — craft-intensive techniques concentrated in artisan workshops. This collection includes fair trade bracelets across metals, beads, textiles, and mixed materials from producers where wages and conditions reflect the skill involved in production.

170 products

Why Buy Fair Trade Bracelets?

Bracelet production involves wire work, bead stringing, metalforming, weaving, and hand-knotting — craft techniques that span jewelry making, textile craft, and mixed-material production. Many bracelets in this collection are made entirely by hand, each requiring individual construction rather than assembly from standardized components. That labor intensity is often invisible in conventional pricing, where handmade bracelets compete against machine-made alternatives on price alone.

Fair trade sourcing establishes pricing that reflects the actual labor of hand production, ensuring artisan makers are compensated at a rate that sustains their workshops. For woven and knotted bracelet producers in particular, fair trade buyer relationships are often the primary market channel that keeps continued craft production viable.

Bracelets are gifted constantly and purchased repeatedly. Choosing fair trade creates a consistent standard — the artisan skill behind each piece is valued appropriately every time, not just occasionally.

What is fair trade jewelry?

Fair trade jewelry refers to jewelry made using materials and production methods designed to ensure fair pay, safer working conditions, and more transparent sourcing. This can apply to both the mining of metals like gold and silver and the artisans who design and assemble the pieces. For shoppers, it means having a clearer understanding of where materials come from and how the jewelry was made.

How can I tell if a bracelet is actually fair trade?

The best way is to look for clear, verifiable information. Certifications like Fairmined, Fairtrade Gold, or WFTO are strong indicators depending on the materials involved. It also helps when brands explain where their metals, beads, or textiles come from. If a brand uses general terms like "ethical" without details, it can be harder to confirm what those claims mean.

Are the artisans who make these bracelets paid fairly?

Fair trade systems are designed to improve how artisans are paid by setting minimum pricing standards and supporting longer-term relationships. This helps create more stable income compared to many conventional supply chains. While outcomes can vary, the goal is to make compensation more predictable and fair.

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Verified ethically made

Every product on The Labour Movement meets our standards for Fair Trade production.

Learn more about our standards