The ghia blog: bringing you shopping advice, industry news, and product updates from shopghia.com.

Thursday, August 30, 2007

Featured Product: Thistle Farms Lip Balm

Lip balm -- It's the accessory you can carry wherever you go, always at the ready to provide smooth, hydrated lips. As you update your fall wardrobe, add some Thistle Farms lip balm to your style.

The lip balms are made of olive oil and almond oil and are free of taste or flavor. However, they do come in a variety of fragrances.

Plus, when you buy Thistle Farms, you are supporting the women of Magdalene House, two-year residential communities of women recovering from prostitution and drug abuse.

The lip balms are currently available in Summer Melon, Rose Grapefruit, and Cherry Almond on shopghia.com.

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Thursday, August 23, 2007

ghia featured in The Tennessean

Nashville newspaper The Tennessean did a feature article on ghia and founder Christy Nicholson.

Check out the article!


Just a side note -- the article says "free trade" several times instead of "fair trade." Our shop is striving to support "fair trade" products.

Thanks so much to reporter Angela Patterson for her interest in our company.

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Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Your Morning Cup of Fair Trade

A recent visitor to the ghia blog wanted to know where to find fair trade coffee in Nashville, suggesting that making your daily caffeine fix fair trade is a great way to support the movement.

One way to find fair trade coffee in your area is use the search tool on Transfair USA's web site. Their list is not comprehensive, but it is a good start. You can also search for places that sell fair trade tea, sugar, cocoa, fruit, and rice.

When I searched for Nashville, Tennessee, I found the following places listed:
Bongo Java
Produce Place
Provence
Wild Oats
Ten Thousand Villages (they don't actually serve coffee, just sell it)

Additionally, Dunkin' Donuts has fair trade coffee, and local stops Sip and Sweet 16th sell Drew's Brews, a Nashville-based brand with a few fair trade blends. And of course, the ubiquitous Starbucks has a few fair trade offerings as well.

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Monday, August 20, 2007

What is Unfair Trade?

What exactly constitutes ‘unfair’ trade?

The answer may (or may not) surprise you. One of the most frequent violators of ‘fair trade’ practices are usually governments. But not just developing or ‘3rd world’ countries governments exploiting an underpaid workforce, but frequently it is large developed countries, charitable organizations, and NGO’s who actually mean to be doing good.

The Scenario:US farmers can produce far more food (in some categories like grain) than the US can consume. If there is not enough demand to meet their over-supply, basic economics dictate their crop can’t sell for enough and they can’t make a living. Meanwhile, elsewhere in the world there are countries suffering through hunger and famine.

An obvious solution presents itself. Rather than the US government making a simple cash donation to help deal with hunger in a given nation, the US government buys up the surplus supply of food crops from US farmers (propping up US prices and keeping more farmers in business) and gives those crops to charities and NGO’s to sell cheaply to the developing world. The NGO’s get to keep the income and reinvest that money. Sounds like a utopian solution. Everyone gets what they need. World hunger: solved.

The problem: That famine stricken nation operates under the same laws of supply and demand everyone else does. So farmers in those countries now have crops that are worth far less. Income goes down. Prices are depressed. There is food enough to feed the starving masses, but those same starving masses can’t afford to buy the crops because their economy is so depressed.

The Solution: Last week, CARE, the largest participant in this particular program pulled out. They receive approx $45 million a year from the US government, much of it through this program. But they realized they were doing as much harm as good.

If economics are allowed to play out as they should, then economies are allowed to develop. But when there is too much charity handed out in the wrong way, things can go wrong and actually make situations worse.

Fair Trade is far more complicated than simply not using child labor and paying a fair wage.

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Sunday, August 19, 2007

Back from BarCamp

The ghia staff went to BarCamp Nashville today, a technology "un-conference" where we learned all sorts of spiffy things about new media and social networks.

I really look forward to integrating some of the things I learned into shopghia.com. While ghia is a commercial enterprise for me, I also look at it as an opportunity to educate people about fair trade products and have a dialogue about social responsibility and shopping.

We already have the ability for customers to submit reviews of products on the site, but I wonder what other ways we can invite the ethical shopping community to participate.

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Friday, August 17, 2007

12 Easy Ways to Support Fair Trade

This list is courtesy of TransFair USA, via Keetsa Blog.
  1. Vote - vote with your dollar, buy fair trade products
  2. Ask - ask for them at your local shops, create demand
  3. Host - have fair trade events to raise awareness in your local community
  4. Join - online communities
  5. Celebrate - every October is fair trade month
  6. Learn - get educated about fair trade and its global impact
  7. Donate - to transfair usa and support their mission
  8. Introduce - the fair trade movement in college campuses
  9. Start - get involved with a local group or start one
  10. Fundraise - hold a school or church fair trade products fundraiser
  11. Give - need gift-giving ideas? fair trade products make great gifts
  12. Serve - fair trade coffee and tea at your next faith service
And of course, I think a great way to support fair trade products is to buy fair trade at shopghia.com! Our current fair trade brand is World Finds, and soon we will be adding fair trade apparel from Avatar Imports.

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Thursday, August 16, 2007

Tomato Re-Cap

We had a great time at the Tomato Art Fest last Saturday. Thanks so much to everyone who stopped by the booth and helped make the day so successful!

One of the highlights of the day was seeing ghia fashions at the East Nashville fashion show.






Thank you to Trisha Brantley of Hip Zipper for organizing such an awesome event!

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Saturday, August 11, 2007

Visit ghia at the Tomato Art Fest and CRAFT this weekend!

If you're in the Nashville, Tennessee, area . . .

Come to East Nashville's Tomato Art Fest this Saturday and visit the ghia booth. We'll have tomato hats, tomato buttons, and some new purses and jewelry from fair trade company World Finds.

We'll be in the lot next to Art & Invention on Woodland Street from 10am to 6pm on Saturday.

For a list of the other awesome events and contests at the Tomato Art Fest, visit www.tomatoartfest.com. There's something for everyone -- free salsa dancing lessons, a parade, face painting -- check it out!


If you can't make it on Saturday, you can see the new ghia products on Sunday at CRAFT -- A Creative Community. We'll be behind Lipstick Lounge at Woodland and 14th from 11am to 5pm.

See you there!

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Thursday, August 2, 2007

Fair Trade Coffee from Dunkin Donuts

Did you know that Dunkin Donuts uses fair trade coffee for its cappuccinos, espressos, and lattes? I didn't, until I read this article from TreeHugger.

Props to Dunkin Donuts for finding ethical sources for their coffee drinks! I'll have to visit my local Dunkin Donuts sometime soon. I'm always looking for a new excuse to eat donuts.

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Wednesday, August 1, 2007

Organic Pet Toys


Keetsa Blog recently mentioned SimplyFido, an online shop that features all-natural pet toys. The products are chemical-free, making them pet friendly and earth friendly.



The toys are adorable, but I'm not sure how long they would last with my lab the power-chewer.

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Special Thanks

We've had a lot of help during these first couple months of business, and there are a lot of 'thank yous' to hand out. Here some people who helped make www.shopghia.com possible:

Business advisers: Jenny Slagle of Wags and Whiskers, Trisha Brantley of Hip Zipper, Amber Marvin of V Floral & Gift, CPA Kris Lange, Natasha Blaskshear of Blackshear Capital and Legal, Don Bingham and SCORE Nashville

Product models: Paul Nicholson, Jessica Goodman, Melissa Peters, Jadyn Peters, Annie Hilscher

Creative advisers: Ariana Terrell, Sarah Hilscher, Amy Nicholson

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