Illustration © David Downton
Oxfam boutiques: News coverage

Gallery

All five boutiques sell sustainable fashion in five categories:

Made with Love
Oxfam simply wouldn’t be Oxfam without the support of tens of thousands of volunteers. Many of them work in Oxfam shops up and down the country. But behind the scenes there are many more with wonderful craft and design talents: people who use their skills to create unique pieces to be treasured.

If you would like to donate your skills to this range we’d love to hear from you. Email givetime@oxfam.org.uk or speak to your local shop manager.

Reinvented
A range of one-offs created exclusively for Oxfam by London College of Fashion students & graduates and independent designers like Junky Styling. Donated items that do not sell in Oxfam shops are sent to our textile recycling plant, Wastesaver. There, our team of talented designers select garments and textiles from yester year and re-style them into on trend pieces. Look out for London College of Fashion Jumble labels and Junk Shop.

Good Fashion Sense
We have carefully selected a range of goodies in every sense of the word. Products in this collection have been chosen because they support our philosophy of sustainability. Clothes and accessories designed to make a difference - organic, recycled, made from alternative fibres or working toward Fair Trade accreditation.

Loved for Longer
Oxfam shops are built on donations and our boutiques are no different. We stock an ever changing range of gorgeous pieces, generously donated by our supporters.

Each rail is a treasure trove: a specially selected mix of designer and quirky and one offs. So come and browse, and at the same time why not bring in some of your old treasures which could be somebody else’s fantastic find.

Fair Trade
Our range of Fair Trade products comes from manufacturers who ensure that employees get a fair deal. Fairtrade Foundation or IFAT fashion and accessories that connect consumers and producers. Labels include Bibico, Trading for Development and Wright and Teague for Oxfam.