Hi, No, I don't know about http://www.stedman.eu/. They have a "daclared" Business ethics which looks good (http://www.stedman.eu/Business-ethics/). The easiest way to check it further is to call them to ask them precise information on how and where they product are made and any guarantee they may have about the respect of their business ethics. I don't know much, but I'm sure any really "responsible" business producing "fair" goods is/should be able to have an independent organization to control and validate their fairness of those of their producer. From various sources, I've often heard that "non-clean" business are usually reluctant to give any information that could lead identification of their to producer, if not openly aggressive about it.
Now, the price list at http://www.t-shirts-bedrukken.be/t-shirts-bedrukken_prijzen_t-shirts.html is unclear about the actual brand. It appears they also uses B&C tee. AFAIK, B&C (http://www.bc-collection.eu) is not fair-trade or eco-friendly. I believe B&C and Fruit of the Loom (another brand) to be the cheapest producer. I would be (happily) surprised if Stedman respect its business ethics and match their prices. P. On Mon, May 31, 2010 at 12:08 PM, Ward De Ridder <[email protected]> wrote: > According to the website this are the t-shirts used: > http://www.stedman.eu/Men-s-Collection/Classic-Men.html > Do you know anything about it, I'm also concerned about those things, > especially Child labour. -- ubuntu-be mailing list / mailto:[email protected] Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-be
