Category: Uncategorized

  • The Beauty You Can Hold: Meet Our Upcycled Creations!

    Ever paused to think about where your plastic bottle caps end up after you’re done with them?

    In many places, including beautiful Laos, unmanaged waste is a growing concern. It clogs our waterways, pollutes our land, and poses a threat to our environment and communities. But what if we told you that these seemingly worthless pieces of plastic could be transformed into something truly beautiful and meaningful?

    Empowering Akha Youth: Crafting a Brighter Future

    At Namtha Aa Saa, we believe in the power of transformation – not just of waste, but of lives. That’s why we’ve embarked on an incredible upcycling project, working hand-in-hand with Akha youth from Luang Namtha. This isn’t just a craft project; it’s a vital initiative providing valuable training and income opportunities for young Akha individuals, particularly those at risk of high school dropout at a young age. They’re learning essential design, crafting, and even business skills, fostering creativity, confidence, and a path towards a sustainable livelihood.

    Discover Our Upcycled Creations!

    We’re incredibly proud of what the Akha youth are creating. Each piece showcases their skill and dedication, and represents a step towards a more sustainable future. Here’s a glimpse of our beautiful products made from upcycled plastic caps

  • Empowered Embroidery

    Reinvigorating Akha Culture and Empowering Young Women through Economic Opportunities


     

    Through this project, we aim to revive traditional Akha embroidery by making it meaningful and viable for the next generation. We create opportunities for Akha girls and young women to learn, innovate, and earn income through embroidery that tells stories of identity, climate, and resilience. We aim to create a safe place to encounter  women to share and bond. Embroidery is also a tool that we use to get women together to share their stories,  listening, learning, and build connections within women in the community and ultimately bound.

    In northern Laos, most women have only one way to earn income: cutting down forest to plant rubber trees. It’s hard work, and it’s not sustainable. Others collect non-timber forest products (NTFPs)—things like mushrooms, herbs, or honey—but it’s done in a way that exhausts the land. The forest doesn’t have time to recover. People don’t always know how to harvest in a way that lets it grow back.

    ECOSYSTEM

    So we started with listening.

    Our entry point was creating a safe space, especially for Akha girls, aged 11 to 17. It’s not easy. In Akha culture, girls often can’t speak to outsiders, especially without a man present. Sometimes they’re not encouraged to speak at all. And the community itself is closed, isolated, slow to trust—even with Lao nationals.

    So we started with listening. We created space for girls to share in their own language, without judgment.

    We borrowed methods from women who’ve faced similar silence: the Tejedoras de Mampuján in Colombia, arpilleristas in Chile, Syrian refugees using embroidery to reclaim their voice. We used embroidery too—not just to create, but to communicate. Each stitch became a way to talk about our lives, our land, our fears, and our future.

    As we stitched, we talked about forests. About the floods. About what happens when the trees don’t come back. We taught how to harvest NTFPs in a way that gives the land time to breathe. And we worked on connecting the crafts to local markets, so the girls could earn a bit of money and keep building their confidence.