Archive for the category "FairMail"

FairMail on national television

Wednesday, October 23rd, 2013

A few weeks ago FairMail was featured in the new Dutch television program “Grensverleggers”. The national business TV channel is covering Dutch entrepreneurs running their social enterprises abroad to create social impact.

The 12 minute episode about FairMail shows the teenagers taking pictures for Ben & Jerry’s corporate Christmas cards on the beach, travelling on a photography trip into the Peruvian jungle and one of the FairMail founders trying to convince 15 year old Clever to stop working, earn money with FairMail and go back to school. Would he succeed do you think?

Have a look at the entire episode here:
FairMail on TV

http://www.rtlxl.nl/#!/grensverleggers-rtl-z-297690/c0cdd2bd-3eca-398d-bf3e-8845dbd41e8a

Fair trade corporate Christmas cards available

Friday, September 20th, 2013

kaartaradhana KerstWhat would your clients and relations say if they received a fair trade Christmas card from you this year?

Past customers like Ben & Jerry’s, EPSON and the Dutch ministry of agriculture express not only their happiness with the quality of FairMail’s service and product but also with the inspired reactions they got.

Besides pre-printed Christmas cards, FairMail also offers tailor made cards with a text, logo and Christmas picture of your choice.

New this year is a Christmas e-card with a video message of the teenager who took the picture and who receives 50% of the profit for education.

You can read more in this digital Christmas flyer.

If you are interested, all you have to do is:

1) Choose a Christmas picture of your choice taken by one of our teenagers.

2) Send us your seasons greetings text plus/or logo.

3) Let us know how many cards you would like and in which size/model (A5 or A6, folded or single)

offerte button english

After we have sent you a price quote we will work on the design. You will receive a digital copy of the design for your approval before we send it to the printer. We don’t send anything to the printer until you are 100% satisfied with the design.

Please let us know if you have any further inquiries by clicking here.

FairMail India office evacuated due to floodings

Sunday, September 15th, 2013
View of the street from the FairMail office

View of the street from the FairMail office

Every year from June to September the heavy monsoon rains fall on India’s dry soil. This is vital for the rain fed agriculture. However this year intense rains have caused the worst flooding in the past 10 years. The situation got so bad that even the FairMail office got surrounded by the rising water and had to be evacuated.

The FairMail office is situated in Nagwa, in the pilgrim city of Varanasi on the borders of the holy Ganges river. The river had to carry so much rain water that the river left its borders. This happens every year during the monsoon. But this year the amount of water was so much that the water flooded parts of Nagwa too. First the water entered the houses of a few of our teenage photographers and their families.

FairMail  teenagers helping to evacuate the volunteer from the FairMail office

FairMail teenagers helping to evacuate the volunteer from the FairMail office

The water just kept rising until also the streets around the FairMail office where flooded. There was no other option then to evacuate the FairMail office and look for another temporary housing option for our volunteer and to suspend the free photography classes until the office would be accessible again.

We were very lucky that the FairMail office is on the third story. Four of our teenagers were less lucky as they had to move themselves and their belongings to the roofs of their houses. Instead of being desperate their reaction was more calm. “You just have to manage it” is mostly their reply when the going gets tough.

FairMail teenager Anil Rao in front of his house

FairMail teenager Anil Rao in front of his house

Like with FairMail teenagers Anil Rao who is brushing his teeth up to his knees in the water running through the street in front of his house.  There is perhaps a lot of wisdom in their reaction. Because in the end it all comes down to how you handle a situation and can manage with the means you do have available.  Like this man on a rikshaw below.

You have to manage it

You have to manage it

FairMail India photographer Anil Rao back in school

Sunday, September 15th, 2013
FairMail India photographer Anil Rao

FairMail India photographer Anil Rao

I am Anil Rao from an old Indian city called Varanasi. I am 16 years old. I have a part time job as a photographer in fair trade card company called FairMail which gives me 50% of the profit of the cards printed with pictures taken by me. This money I only can spend on my educational and housing needs.

In India the government schools are made for the poor students. But these schools don’t teach so nicely and the student has to work hard if he has studied at these schools and wants to go for higher studies. With the financial conditions of my family I could only afford to go to the government schools where the condition for studying is not so good. The only way to get good conditions for studying is to get admission in private English school which asks for high fees every month. This amount couldn’t be afforded by my family. After getting a part time job in FairMail I earned the amount of money which was sufficient for me to pay the fees of a good private school.

Anil and his family

Anil and his family

When I initially went in to my new school (which was private) I was the only guy who had weak financial conditions in his family. I was so uncomfortable to go to school because I didn’t have so many nice friends. It was hard for me to convince my mind to go to school. Regularly I was suspended from FairMail for one month for not going to school. But slowly I made nice friends and started going to school every day. And as a result I got good marks in my recent exams. And slowly I got out of the special teenage condition and convinced my mind that this is my school.

Peruvian teenagers take pictures for Ben & Jerry’s corporate Christmas card

Sunday, September 15th, 2013
Ksanier being assisted by volunteer Jie during the photoshoot

Ksanier being assisted by volunteer Jie during the photoshoot

Even though it is still summer in many parts of the world, our teenagers are already busy taking pictures for the upcoming Christmas card season. Among their customers this year is Ben & Jerry’s. They requested a tailor made picture for their fair trade corporate Christmas card. In order to do so they sent a box stuffed with all kinds of Ben & Jerry’s props like caps, pens, slippers, cooler bags, ice cream cups etc. to our teenagers in Peru.

Yomira drawing her idea for a perfect picture

Yomira drawing her idea for a perfect picture

The teenagers in Peru set their creativity to work. By first imagining their perfect picture that transmits the right feeling. After drawing their perfect picture they presented their ideas to the other photographers so everyone could give and get valuable feedback. By now everyone knew what to do and went to work.

Anidela working on her perfect picture

Anidela working on her perfect picture

After every photography session the pictures where evaluated during the FairMail class on the computer. With the help of the volunteer photography trainers points for improvement where discussed. This way in several rounds the pictures actually started becoming “perfect pictures”.

A pre-selection of 40 images has been sent to Ben & Jerry’s who will pick their favorite image for this year’s card. Exciting!

One of Anidela's pictures for Ben & Jerry's

One of Anidela’s pictures for Ben & Jerry’s

Would you like your employer to also send out fair trade Christmas cards, either custom made or from our stock? Then have a look at this digital flyer about what FairMail has to offer.

And let us know who within your company or organization we can contact directly. Thanks for your help!

One of Jorge's pictures for Ben & Jerry's

One of Jorge’s pictures for Ben & Jerry’s

New FairMail documentary: From Dump to Diploma

Sunday, September 15th, 2013

Next week FairMail will be on Dutch National Television in the new “Groundbreaker” television series. This week we can offer you the new “From Dump to Diploma” video which came out 3 weeks ago.

This new 8 minute documentary tells the story of FairMail Peru photographers Yuli and Yomira. How they had to work at a young age recycling garbage to supplement their families small income before they started taking pictures for FairMail. The new documentary gives insight into their daily activities for FairMail and how it has impacted their lives. Not only through the earnings from the sale of their cards to invest in their own education. But also in their personal development and the mindset needed to really achieve their goals.

A unique and inspirational documentary of hope and determination! Check it out below.

Results of FairMail’s European promotion tour

Sunday, September 15th, 2013

Learning which cards sell well
On the 11th of September, after travelling through Europe with two of FairMail Peru’s teenage photographers for three weeks, FairMail’s fourth European promotion tour ended.

After flying to the Netherlands for the first time in their lives Yuli  and Yomira  drove more than 3.000 kilometers through Belgium, France and Germany.

Presenting at the FA!R in DortmundOn their way they:

>> Presented FairMail on the main stage of a B2B fair trade fair in Dortmund.

>> Met with 6 corporate customers who buy their pictures in France, Germany, Belgium and the Netherlands

>> Gave 7 interviews to different newspapers and magazines (view here).

>> Saw their cards selling in 4 shops.

>> Learned what cards do and don’t sell well from 2 of their sales representatives.

>> Visited 1 music festival to sell their cards directly to the end consumer.

>> Took 2.400 pictures of Europe to show their family back home.

A dream come true: visiting the Eiffel tower>> Met up with nearly 40 ex-volunteers of photography trip travelers who visited Peru in the past.

>> Ended up with interesting 2 powerpoint presentation to present the results of their marketing studies to their colleagues in Peru and India.

Check out more pictures of the tour on FairMail’s Facebook page.

FairMail India teenager Aradhana first in math’s test

Saturday, September 14th, 2013

FairMail India photographer Aradhana together with her volunteer photography trainerHi, my name is Aradhana and I am a photographer in FairMail India. It has been good to be part of this program. I did not know English, nor photography before I entered. But now as I speak with Volunteers in English I feel for myself that my English has improved a lot and I am very happy with my success.

I also see in my tuition that my math’s has improved. I was even first in this year’s math’s test. I have been selected for the next European promotional trip in 2014. I am very excited about that and looking forward for it.

Last month I learned about portrait photography. I used to take portrait photos of others but last month our photography teacher Eleanor taught us how to take portrait of ourselves. So during that time one becomes model and other take photo of you, so it was new for me. I am very thankful to my volunteers who taught us very well and many new things. Thanks to FairMail and also to the Volunteers. Aradhana.

Would you like to share your passion for photography with our teenagers in Peru or India? Then check out the volunteering opportunities and options for travelling with FairMail during our photography trips.

FairMail celebrates seventh birthday

Thursday, June 27th, 2013
FairMail India Celebrating 7 years of FairMail

FairMail India Celebrating 7 years of FairMail

This month we are celebrating it is 7 years ago that FairMail founder Janneke Smeulders took her camera to Trujillo’s garbage dump for the first time to take pictures with the local Peruvian teenagers. “At that time I only wanted to let the teenagers have fun with my camera as I noticed their interest in camera’s while volunteering there.

But back home in her restaurant it didn’t feel right to teach the teenagers a new hobby which they would never have the money for to practice on their own. Plus it didn’t seem to contribute to solving the problem these teenagers where facing which was not having the time nor the money to go to school.

FairMail Peru celebrating 7 years FairMail

FairMail Peru celebrating 7 years FairMail

As the pictures that came out of the first session where so good it inspired Janneke to print the best ones on post cards. She could sell them to tourists coming to her vegetarian restaurant and give 50% of the profit back to the teenager who took the picture to invest in their own education.

Without having any idea what would have become of her idea today, 7 years later: A multi-national fair trade company employing 50 teenagers in 3 countries, selling 500.000 cards per year in 10 different countries.

With this info graphic we have tried to illustrate FairMail’s development and milestones over the past 7 years:

FairMail Milestones

FairMail Milestones

We also asked the teenagers to share with us what their best memories where the past 7 years and what they hope for in the next 7 years. This is what they wrote down (click on the picture to see in large format):

Sandhya Rao

Sandhya Rao

Kaushal Kumar

Kaushal Kumar

Chandra shekhar

Chandra shekhar

Anshu Dinkar

Anshu Dinkar

Aradhna Kumari

Aradhna Kumari

Anil Rao

Anil Rao

Milestone reached: Over 100.000 euro in earnings for teenager photographers

Thursday, June 27th, 2013

After calculating the profits of card and picture sales in the first four months of 2013 we reached an important milestone in FairMail’s history: 100.107 euro in direct earnings by our teenage photographers from Peru, India and Morocco. That means 100.107 euro directly invested (or still saved ready to invest) in the teenagers education, housing or health through the sale of their own pictures!

Who would have thought when we started FairMail in June 2006 that these teenagers, who had never touched a camera before, would have been able to take such great pictures? And that they were able to turn the free resource of local beauty into so much local income?

You can check out each teenager’s exact earnings and what each one has done so far with their money on their personal profile page.

Thanks to everyone for helping us make this possible!