Thursday, July 24, 2025
12:00 – 13:00, (EST)
Seed 2 Shirt: The first black-woman-owned vertically integrated apparel manufacturing in the U.S.
Come and join us on July 24th at noon for Seed 2 Shirt, the first black-woman-owned company in the U.S. that empowers marginalized people by creating earth-friendly and fair-trade products and services and creating and collaborating in supportive programs that do good and change the world. Black cotton farmers and cooperatives are the backbone of their operation. They uphold their values by investing in the growth and wellness of regenerative and organic agricultural practices and carbon-neutral and eco-friendly production.
Seed 2 Shirt is the first black-woman-owned vertically integrated apparel manufacturing & print on demand company in the US. Their products are ethically and sustainably manufactured from cotton from African, and African-American cotton farmers produced at small batch production centers in the US and Africa.
To answer to regional and national farmer and supply chain obstacles, they formed the B.L.A.C.Kollective (Black land agroecology cotton-farmer collective). The BLACKollective© is a member-based solution to collectively address the challenges that US Black cotton farmers face–resources, market, and non-extractive relationships that connect them to textile and apparel sectors in a way that honors people, land, and institution building reclaiming our connection to these spaces in the Black community.
Seed 2 Shirt is the first black-woman-owned vertically integrated apparel manufacturing & print on demand company in the US. Their products are ethically and sustainably manufactured from cotton from African, and African-American cotton farmers produced at small batch production centers in the US and Africa.
To answer to regional and national farmer and supply chain obstacles, they formed the B.L.A.C.Kollective (Black land agroecology cotton-farmer collective). The BLACKollective© is a member-based solution to collectively address the challenges that US Black cotton farmers face–resources, market, and non-extractive relationships that connect them to textile and apparel sectors in a way that honors people, land, and institution building reclaiming our connection to these spaces in the Black community.
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