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Handmade Large Wood and Clay Bird Flute - Fair Trade- Peru

Handmade Large Wood and Clay Bird Flute - Fair Trade- Peru

Regular price $11.95 USD
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Birds are known for their melodic music and their songs have inspired humans for centuries. Blow into the heads of one of these Peruvian Bird Gems and see what chirping sounds/music they will create for you. These Clay Birds with Wooden Flutes were handmade by artisans in the Peruvian Andes. 

We offer three types of bird flutes: Toucan, Parrot, and Generic Bird. Each flute has four holes on the top and one on the bottom to make eight different pitches/notes.

Dimensions: 7" long x 2" diameter (bird)

Handmade in Peru and Fair Trade imported.

Learn more about the talented artists that create these unique fair trade instruments as well as the techniques they use to create them. Click below on "About the Artisans". 

About the Artisans

Chichicastenango, Guatemala, has become one of the most important heritage centers in Guatemala during the past 10 years, due to its predominant indigenous Maya Quiche population and their traditional textile products. Yet, despite increased tourism and a renewed interest in traditional Mayan crafts, work opportunities remain few for the indigenous population, many of whom are uneducated and otherwise unemployable.


De Colores Artisan - Sewing a SmileEnter De Colores Art, a local business that levels the playing field for villagers by offering free training to anyone who demonstrates the initiative to learn a trade. The company employs 30 women and 18 men to knit and embroider textile products, with the option of working at home using materials provided by the company. De Colores recognizes the culture of its Mayan employees, and as such allows flexible hours and gives time off for sowing and harvest days.

De Colores also invests in community education projects by funding two local schools in the neighboring towns of Chujupen y Pachoj, and by providing scholarships to qualifying students.

In addition to stimulating the local economy by creating new jobs, De Colores makes a conscious effort to use recycled materials whenever possible. The reason for this is twofold: to preserve Mayan culture, as recycled textiles showcase traditional knitting patterns that aren’t often seen in newer textiles, and to reduce scraps and waste.

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Communities collaborate in the production process, as men work on the biggest textiles and women do the embroidery, crochet and macramé seen in smaller pieces. In some cases, in order to be competitive, sewing machines are used to assemble the finished product, although all the components are handmade and hand embroidered from cotton, wool and/or silk.

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