STF featured on Channel 9 News!

Events, Press, STF News, Trafficking News & Information — Emily on July 23, 2010 at 12:00 pm

Thursday night we attended the rally for Five Weeks for Freedom at the Freedom Center.  The event featured cyclists who are cycling part of the route of the Underground Railroad in order to raise awareness of human trafficking and support International Justice Mission. There were lots of other great organizations there, as well.  Channel 9 News in Cincinnati was there and did a great story featuring Stop Traffick Fashion and others.  The story does a great job telling the story of modern day slavery.  You can read the text below or click on the link to see the video.

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Modern-day slavery is real

WCPO Channel 9 News

Posted: 11:19 PM, 7/22/10

CINCINNATI - Loveland Resident Emily Hill took a trip to Thailand. After meeting young women living in poverty who were at risk of being slaves, she decided to start stoptraffickfashion.com.

Hill’s company only purchases and sells fashionable items made by survivors of human trafficking.

“It gives them a sense of dignity and confidence in themselves again. And most importantly it helps them generate a sustainable income for themselves going forward,” Hill said.

Hill chose to set up her booth at Thursday’s “5 Weeks of Freedom” event hosted by the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center.

The point of the event was to remind the public that slavery is not a thing of the past.

“There are more slaves today than over 400 years of the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade. 27 to 40 million estimated slaves in the world. So in 2010 it’s hard to think that that’s true,” said Amy Roth who is with the International Justice Mission, a Washington based anti-slavery organization.

Everyone that attended got to enjoy music, performances, and most of all, an education.

“When you hear lives of sexual exploitation or families sold into lives of 18 hour days, you can’t help but stop for a moment and say that is unacceptable today in 2010,” Roth said.

To learn more about modern-day slavery, click on the related links.

Second Sundays in OTR

Events, Press, STF News — Emily on June 9, 2010 at 11:00 am

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On June 13th and July 11th from 12-5pm we will be at Second Sundays in Over The Rhine.  Second Sundays is a hip, eclectic event put on by the OTR Chamber of Commerce featuring lots of shopping, food and entertainment.  You can shop from some of our most popular items, including our new line from Nomi Network.  In fact, I think the new Nomi bags would be the perfect accessory for experiencing all the happenings in OTR.  Come out to enjoy a [hopefully] beautiful day, support other local Cincinnati vendors and have lots of fun downtown.  Plus, this Sunday the 13th is a “Dog Days” theme, so bring your dog!

Spring Photo Shoot

Press, Product Information, STF News — Emily on April 5, 2010 at 4:42 pm

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Several weeks ago we had a fabulously fun fashion shoot to capture some of our great products in action.  You can check out a behind the scenes look at the shoot on the Style Sample blog and see all of the finished photos on our Facebook page.  Enjoy!

Join the Journey of Freedom

Our T-shirt Launch & Benefit Concert is just one week away!  We are getting very excited about the event and hope that you can make it out to see our new T-shirts, hear great music, see great art and have some fabulous coffee.

In the upcoming week Melissa will be sharing with you first hand accounts of her visit to Freeset in Kolkata, India.  The women of Freeset make our new T-shirts and also some of our bags. This will be a great way for you to find out more about the women who work at Freeset and their journey of freedom.  It will also show you how you can become part of their journey.  So stay tuned!

In the mean time, check out the latest video from Freeset.

Announcing the STF T-Shirt Design Contest!

Press, Product Information, STF News, Uncategorized — Emily on January 6, 2010 at 2:26 am

It’s 2010 and we’re excited to add T-shirts to our collection of items made by survivors of human trafficking! As you may know, we currently sell awesome jute totes from Freeset in Kolkata, India.  We’ll be adding some great new tote bag designs to our website by the end of January but we are also thrilled that Freeset is now making fair trade, organic cotton t-shirts.  A Freeset tee sustainably pulls people out of poverty, children and pesticides out of fields, and women out of the sex trade - what a deal!

There’s just one catch - we need some designs!  And we’d like the designs to reflect our vision.  At Stop Traffick Fashion we have 3 goals:

  • Support the victims and survivors of human trafficking
  • Support the organizations who are rescuing and providing rehabilitation for victims
  • Raise awareness about human trafficking

Think hope. Think change. Think restoration.  Think about a design that will get people’s attention and allow you to tell them about Stop Traffick Fashion and the 27 million slaves around the world.  You can read more about our vision here.

The design should fit the following specifications:

  • 1-3 colors on front (and back if desired)
  • Black, White, Brown, Blue or Green T-shirt Background (see swatches below)
  • Female or Unisex design
  • PDF and PNG files

color-chart

We’ll be choosing 1-2 designs to be printed and sold on Stop Traffick Fashion.  The winner will receive 1 free T-shirt, a $25 gift certificate for Equal Exchange, plus the knowledge that you’re helping us spread the word about human trafficking and making a difference in the lives of survivors around the world! January is National Human Trafficking Awareness month (more on this later) so what a great way to contribute.

Final Details:

  • Designs are due by February 1, 2010
  • Email your submission to hello@stoptraffickfashion.com
  • Please provide your email address and phone number so we can contact you!
  • If your design is chosen the final version will be owned by Stop Traffick Fashion
  • If you have any questions you can also email us at hello@stoptraffickfashion.com

STF on The Examiner.com

Press — Emily on November 15, 2009 at 6:48 pm

The Examiner.com - November 14, 2009

Stop Traffick Fashion Makes Shopping Meaningful
By Tamia Stinson

Stop Traffick Fashion founder Emily Hill
Stop Traffick Fashion founder Emily Hill
Emily Hill

Shopping for a cause has to be one of the best ideas, ever. At least, that’s what Emily Hill hopes. Hill is the founder of Stop Traffick Fashion, a retail site dedicated to raising awareness about the horrors of human trafficking and providing a place for fashionistas to shop for stylish goods created by trafficking victims.

The Cincinnati native graduated from Miami University with an MA in Economics and currently works for Nielsen in addition to acting as the president, buyer, blogger, and media contact for Stop Traffick Fashion, which launched this past summer.

“I wanted to hand-pick products and sell them to a new set of consumers to raise awareness.”

Her passion for the cause was solidified on a trip to Thailand while in college, when she visited a school for high-risk young girls in danger of becoming victims of human trafficking. “That brought it home for me because they were your average 12-year-old girls.” Over time, she became more deeply involved, and at an industry event she noticed some of the vendors sold products made by survivors of trafficking. That was when the initial idea took root.

Running the business
Emily runs Stop Traffick Fashion mostly on her own, with help from friends and family as needed. She works directly with organizations with offices and distribution in the US, buys the products wholesale, and people are paid fair wages for fair trade products. She also donates a portion of her sales back to the organizations.

Most of the inventory resides in her home, where she’s “set up a little area for packing and shipping.” All orders are carefully packaged by hand with attention to detail. She hopes to add new lines and carry clothing soon, and eventually open a brick-and-mortar shop to sell products.

“I try to stay focused on success of Stop Traffick Fashion as awareness, not necessarily the business side.” For Hill, the most rewarding part is when people become more engaged in the cause and try to make small changes, “When I can get people thinking about what they buy and where it comes from.”

Changing the way we shop
She advises gradually making adjustments to your shopping habits. “Start by investigating some of the sites that provide information about the consequences of trafficking and the companies who participate in this practice, and think about what you can change.”

You can check to see which companies are on the watchlist at Free2Work.org, and visit Chain Store Reaction for a list of companies that may play a part in the exploitation of fellow humans. The Stop Traffick blog also has a page of resources to consult. “Organizations out there need our support.”

Emily notes that organizations need monetary donations as well, since economic empowerment is a very big part of rehabilitation for victims of human trafficking. Funding leads to teaching people job skills, which leads to confidence, which leads to hope.

“It’s amazing to see how much hope they do have.”

Shop online at Stop Traffick Fashion and visit the blog at Stoptraffickfashion.com/blog.STFSTF

Our latest news coverage

Press, STF News — Emily on October 10, 2009 at 12:23 pm

Last night Stop Traffick Fashion was featured in the Female Focus segment of Channel 1o news in Columbus.  Here is a link to the article and the video!

STF on TV!

Press — Emily on September 11, 2009 at 11:46 pm

Channel 10 News Columbus - Friday,  October 9, 2009 4:28 PM

Handmade Goods Crafted By Women Recently Freed From Slavery (click this link to see the video!)

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Millions of women and girls live like Tina Frundt once did.  When she was 14 years old, she was forced into prostitution.

Theresa Flores was drugged, raped, photographed and blackmailed into commercial sex when she was 15.

Human trafficking is the world’s dirty little secret according to Emily Hill, who has met survivors in Asia whose parents sold them into slavery.

“It’s estimated to be about 27 million people enslaved around the world,” Hill said.  “I just knew in my heart I had to do something.”

Hill started a business, called Stop Traffick.  She works with international charitable groups to market jewelry and handbags crafted by women who were rescued from prostitution and slavery.

“They’re paid a fair wage to make these products, so that they can create a sustainable income for their family and they won’t be at risk for being trafficked again,” Hill said.  “To be a part of that hope that they have and give them that opportunity, it’s really a good feeling.”

Hill sells the goods online.

More Information:

Fabulous Find

Press, Product Information, STF News — Emily on August 31, 2009 at 1:21 pm

Today’s fabulous find at the Homage Blog is Stop Traffick Fashion! Head over to read their recommendation and see their favorite items.

We’re excited about a few more things lately!  The response to the articles in Cincy Chic and the Cincinnati Enquirer has been fabulous so far.  We are getting a lot of support, interest for trunk shows and new connections in the community. We’ll be listing some new items on the site soon.  And finally, we’ll be publishing a calendar of events in the next couple of weeks to let you know where you can come out and support Stop Traffick Fashion.  Stay tuned!

STF in the news

Press, STF News — Emily on August 27, 2009 at 10:31 pm

I’m excited to write that Stop Traffick Fashion is in the news again!  We were featured in the business section of the Cincinnati Enquirer today.  We’ll be at quite a few events around Cincinnati throughout the fall so we’ll be posting those dates once they are finalized!

Cincinnati Enquirer - August 27, 2009

By Laura Baverman • lbaverman@enquirer.com • August 27, 2009

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A trip to Thailand in college introduced Emily Hill to human trafficking.

Nearly a decade later, the Walnut Hills resident has stepped into the front lines to help fight it. Her online boutique, Stop Traffick Fashion, sells fashionable handbags, jewelry and body lotions made by women who have survived or escaped sex slavery and human trafficking situations.

Hill came face to face with modern-day slavery when she taught English at an orphanage in Thailand. She heard of girls aged 9 to 18 who had either been forced into hard manual labor or servitude, or had been sold as a sex slave.

In poor villages surrounding the orphanage, Hill met parents who were duped into selling their children into slavery. They thought they were giving them up so they could have a job and a better life.

“You just become paralyzed by all that knowledge,” she said. “I knew I couldn’t let my life go on in the same way.”

Hill wouldn’t stay paralyzed for long. She spent several years reading all she could about human trafficking, learning about the organizations that spent time fighting it and attending and volunteering at events to build awareness.

After two years working for downtown’s Modeling Group in its London office, she asked to be transferred back to Cincinnati. It was time for action.

Earlier this year, Hill started Stop Traffick Fashion. She contracted with a Web developer to build an e-commerce site, www.stoptraffickfashion.com, where she could sell products made by survivors of sex slavery and human trafficking.

“I’m not a social worker. I can’t rescue these girls,” she said. But she recognized that performing labor - learning a skill and making money to support a family - helps build their confidence.

“They don’t want to just be a charity case,” said Stephanie Voorkamp, a director for California-based Freedom Store, a project of the Not for Sale campaign to abolish modern-day slavery. “They want a job. That gives them opportunity and hope.”

Selling the fruits of their labor let Hill contribute in some way.

Hill buys products at wholesale costs from organizations like Voorkamp’s that employ these women. Jute tote bags come from Freeset Bags in Calcutta, India, where women have been saved from prostitution. Cambodian women who have suffered from exploitation and domestic abuse work at Hagar Design making silk handbags and tote bags from recycled rice bags. Victims of prostitution work for Night Light in Bangkok crafting jewelry.

Hill even buys product made by women who have escaped sex slavery situations in the United States. For Not for Sale, they make hand and body lotions.

Products range in price, but Hill has worked hard to find items that are affordable. Jewelry is $20 to $80, handbags $19 to $75 and bath and body products around $20 a bottle.

The hardest task for Hill is marketing her site while maintaining her full-time job. She’s scheduled a handful of trunk shows around town for the remainder of this year. She hopes to eventually add apparel and men’s products to the site, though it can be hard to find manufacturers that are both fashion conscious and make items of good quality. A storefront in Cincinnati could come down the road as well.

It’s Hill’s passion that has impressed Jane Tafel, president of Hagar USA, an organization that provides trauma counseling, shelters and investigative services to victims, as well as literacy education and vocational training.

“What has drawn her to the product is the mission behind it,” Tafel said. “It’s a very strong motivation for her to make a difference through this company.”

For now, Hill is focusing on promoting the cause with each sale. She wraps each item by hand and ships in nice packaging, with detailed information about trafficking and ways to get involved.

“I want it to be a specific shopping experience, like a boutique,” she said. Hill doesn’t necessarily want to target activists, rather fashion-conscious women with social awareness.

She hopes to use Stop Traffick to generate a new set of activists.

“The most important thing is that more people find out about it. If I can use Stop Traffick to make that happen, that’s success,” she said.

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