HANDSNHUE
Our Commitment

Loved by Homes.
Respected by Earth.

HandsNHue designs for modern living without leaving a footprint on our planet. We believe that true luxury must be sustainable and ethical.

100% Natural Organic Fibers

We exclusively source long-staple organic cotton, coarse hand-spun Khadi cotton, and Belgian flax linen. Our crops are grown without synthetic fertilizers or chemical pesticides, preserving groundwater in Rajasthan and Bihar.

Plastic-Free Luxury Packaging

Our logistics commitment is zero single-use plastic. We package our throws and quilts in reusable hand-woven cotton dust bags. Shipping cartons are secured with biodegradable paper tape, and tags are crafted from recycled garment waste.

Certified Fair Wages

Our contracts guarantee weaver cooperatives receive wages up to 40% higher than local minimum standards. This prevents rural migration, supporting artisans to work close to their families in West Bengal and Gujarat.

Women Empowerment Hubs

Our Kantha stitching is subcontracted directly to female weavers in West Bengal. This allows mothers to work flexible hours from home, creating a path toward financial independence while balancing childcare.

Our Circular Cycle

Tracing the ecological cycle of a HandsNHue product from organic soil to your home.

01

Organic Soils

Organic cotton is farmed in India's rain-fed valleys using non-GMO seeds and composting.

02

Botanical Dyes

Fibers are dyed with botanical plant extracts (indigo leaf, madder root, walnut shells).

03

Hand Loomed

Master weavers loom blankets and throws without heavy fossil-fuel machinery.

04

Zero Plastic

Items are packed in recycled cotton bags and dispatched directly from Iowa warehouse.

Zero-Chemical Dyes

Botanical Indigo & Clay Resists

Traditional textile printing often pollutes local waterways with toxic chromium and synthetic chemicals. HandsNHue rejects this practice.

We employ centuries-old dye processes. Indigo leaves are fermented to create rich blues. Madder roots produce deep terracotta clay hues, while Dabu printing utilizes a mud-paste stamp made of black soil, gum, and wheat chaff to resist pigments organically. The wash water is entirely filtered and recycled to irrigate local fields.

Indigo vat dyeing