are you a member yet
CNET NETWORKS UK CONSUMER SITES: CNET.co.uk | CNETTV.co.uk | GameSpot.co.uk | SmartPlanet.com

Anonymous User

Log in | Join us!

Advertisment
Promo

The Fair Trade Company Jepara Chair Full Review

Tags: fair trade, furniture

7.9
Editors' Score
 
7.9
This chair's certainly comfy, with reasonable back support from the supplied lumbar cushion and enough space to curl up in for a nap
Typical price £650

Posted: 20 March 2008 by Adam Vaughan

As you sit reading this, it's unlikely you're worrying much about the livelihoods and wages of the people who assembled the chair that's stopping you from dropping, Wile E. Coyote-style, to the floor. This new 'fair trade' chair, however, hopes to change that.

One of four different designs from new firm The Fair Trade Furniture Company (FTFC), the Jepara corner chair is made from a Mindi wood frame, wrapped in a banana fibre weave and topped with a duck feather-filled cotton cushion. The icing on this inedible cake is a commitment to trading "fairly" with the chair's makers in Java, Indonesia.

What that means is rather woolly, since the UK body which usually doles out official fair trade badges -- the Fairtrade Foundation -- doesn't yet certify furniture. As a workaround, FTFC has joined the respected International Fairtrade Association as a provisional member, with a view to becoming full members. Provisional membership means very little, but once promoted to full membership the chair's designers will need to file a self-assessment of fair trade practices which will be assessed by IFAT.

In the meantime, FTFC says it pays 60 per cent in advance, pays the full balance when goods arrive in the UK (rather than two months later) and agrees on a price that the Indonesian manufacturers are happy with. Obviously, we're taking the company's word for that. But with a non-exec director who used to work for Traidcraft and one of the team having formerly been a full IFAT member, we're inclined to trust them more than we would a start-up with no pedigree.

So, how's it fare at being a chair? Well, it's certainly a comfy one, with reasonable back support from the supplied lumbar cushion and enough space to curl up in for a nap. It's competently made, too. The banana fibre -- which sadly has no eco labelling such as FSC or PEFC to certify it's from a sustainable source -- is tightly and neatly wound around the wooden frame. Of the 218 horizontal weaves of fibre that we counted on our chair, not one was loose or fraying, suggesting this is a sturdy chair that'll endure more than one living room in its lifetime.

We also like the handsome design, though for the sort of money the chair costs -- a cool £650 -- we'd expect more of a luxury look and feel. Chairs of a similar size and function at Habitat cost more like £400. And while this chair is very well done, it's more on a par with Habitat than a deluxe designer standard.

One final thing to note on the actual chair is its size -- it's surprisingly big, measuring 740mm deep by 740mm wide and 1,100mm high. It's accordingly heavy too, so don't plan on using it as a portable chair to lug from corner to corner.

Back in Java, the chair is made by a factory called Mokko International, which FTFC has visited and describes as having conditions that are "certainly above average" and a "very pleasant working environment and atmosphere." Workers reportedly get free food and milk in addition to their wagers. The banana weavers are employed on a freelance basis at the same workshop and are given free food and lodging. By most furniture standards, this is a good degree of detail on manufacturing conditions. You can see (a few) photos online.

Green touches aren't neglected either. Products are shipped, not air-freighted, fabrics are hand-woven rather than machine-woven, the FTFC team carbon offset its flights to Indonesia and powers its UK offices from a renewables tariff from Ecotricity. We do have one niggle -- the lack of organic and/or Fairtrade cotton for the cushions, though we're told that's being worked on.

For a more green-tinged place to arrest your resting bottom, there are better alternatives than the Jepara. If, however, you're in the market for a centrepiece living room chair with a fair trade element and a thought-through ethical approach, this is the best we've seen so far.

Score breakdown:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
8.6
Quality
6.9
Value
8.5
Ethics
7.6
Green
Telephone:
+44 (0)845 009 9865




Review It

Tell the world what you think of The Fair Trade Company Jepara Chair, write a review.




Advertisment
Close Rouge Baby Carrier
This new design is comfy for smaller babies but the stretchy material lets heavier toddlers bounce around too much
Huggababy Organic Sling
A great design in theory, and very eco-friendly, but sadly uncomfortable and hard to adjust
Wilkinet Baby Carrier
It's a well-designed baby carrier that holds your baby close but keeps you both cool -- with superb creds
Didymos Wraparound Sling
It's made from beautiful fabric that keeps both of you comfortable -- Baby can sleep peacefully while you're on the move
Ronseal Eco Floor Varnish
A resilient, easy-to-use step in the right direction, but Ronseal may be varnishing its green reputation along with your floors
Get SmartPlanet in your inbox

Get SmartPlanet in your inbox

Step this way to get your daily fix of green news, eco product launches and videos delivered by email.

Avatar
Eco Kettle
This is yet another example of a 'manufactured need'. Whatever was wrong ... Read review by Picturethis
4.3
Avatar
Natural Magic Organic Revitalise Treatment Candle
The thought behind this brand is a good one. But i have been making ... Read review by boyowa123
2.5
Avatar
Mooncup Reusable Menstrual Cup
The more I think about it, the more I wonder why every adult woman on the ... Read review by Ghostlove
10

Copyright ©1995-2008 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved.