
Martha Stewart, Macy’s top executive and a high-end fashion designer landed in the Haitian capital Wednesday to do a little shopping, the Associated Press reports.
The aim of the day trip was to explore business opportunities, promote foreign investment and even renew purchase orders for the metal and papier-mache handicrafts for which the Caribbean nation has long been known.
“It’s a commercial visit,” Stewart told The Associated Press. “We’re talking business.”
Stewart and fashion designer Rachel Roy came to Haiti at the invitation of Macy’s Chairman and CEO Terry Lundgren to meet with Haitian artisans and see the crafts they have been making and selling in 25 of his stores in the United States since October.
“I wanted them to see, like I’m seeing firsthand, the beautiful products that are being made here,” Lundgren said as workers clanked away on metal sculptures in the courtyard of a studio on the northeastern edge of Port-au-Prince.
On Wednesday, Macy’s placed a new order for 2,500 items. Stewart, who visited Haiti in the 1970s and ’80s, and Roy bought beaded and sequined bags, cushion covers, bracelets, earrings and quilts.
The genesis of the artisan project goes back to May of last year when the Clinton Foundation gathered investors, aid workers and artisans in New York to figure out ways to connect Haiti with international retailers.
Macy’s, Fairwinds Trading and the BrandAid Foundation developed a plan for Macy’s to commission Haitian handicrafts, which the retailer began selling in its stores and online in time for last year’s Christmas season.
On macys.com, prices for the Haitian items range from a vase that costs $54 to a large bowl that sells for $120. Paintings of Haiti’s marketplaces are also on sale at $109.
“We sold out and sold well,” Lundgren told journalists as he paused among tables topped with salad bowls, jewelry, patchwork quilts and chairs made of recycled metal.
Working from that campaign, the Clinton Bush Haiti Fund gave more than $600,000 in grants and loans to Fairwinds Trading, Aid to Artisans and the BrandAid Foundation to help develop Haiti’s artisan sector.
The project aims to create jobs and build artisan communities so Haitians are not entirely dependent upon handouts from overseas – an idea touted as “trade not aid.”
Macy’s has participated in similar projects before. In 2005, the retailer began selling hand-woven baskets from the African nation of Rwanda.
The project in Haiti now employs 450 artisans, and their earnings range from 25 percent to 38 percent of the retail price for each item sold in the Macy’s collection.
The profits help pay for meals, school tuition and even repairs to their homes damaged in the January 2010 earthquake. The organizers also believe that income will spill into the neighborhoods of Croix-des-Bouquets and Jacmel, two cities long famous for their artistic communities.

Artisan Brutus Jean-Carlo, a native of Croix-des-Bouquets, said Macy’s orders are giving him $250 extra a month.
“It’s helping me a little, but I’d like a larger contract,” the 35-year-old said.
The number of artisans employed is expected to grow as interest grows, Lundgren said.
The shopping visit comes at an uncertain time for potential investors and Haitians themselves.
Haiti is still recovering from the earthquake, and the new administration of President Michel Martelly has yet to install a prime minister and Cabinet after almost three months in office.
Haitian business leaders have expressed concern that the absence of a prime minister could prove a barrier for economic development and foreign investment.
Still, one artisan has hopes the trip by Stewart and the others could encourage other international companies to invest in Haiti despite the challenges.
“If Haiti has a label, handicrafts should be one of them,” said Einstein Albert, the 41-year-old owner of a family artisan business. “If Fairwinds and Macy’s come, I think other companies will come.”
For the original report go to http://www.longislandpress.com/2011/07/27/martha-stewart-macys-ceo-studying-haiti-crafts/
Thanks to Macys and Martha Stewart for doing business with Haiti.
By: Margarette Michel on July 29, 2011
at 9:30 pm
Great news! Macy’s is one of my favorite stores. I will continue spending my money there, knowing that part of it will go for a great cause.
By: Micheline Thomas on August 2, 2011
at 3:16 pm
CONGRATULATIONS MARTHA!
THANK YOU FOR YOUR VISIT IN HAITI AND YOUR GREAT INTEREST FOR OUR HANDYCRAFT PRODUCTION
WE HAVE SO MANY GOOD THINGS IN OUR COUNTRY !
DID YOU VISIT THE POLISH COMMUNITY IN CAZALE, FONDS DES BLANCS AND OTHER PLACES?
LAST JUNE, I WENT TO MANHATTAN MACY’S TWICE AND IT WAS VERY PLEASANT TO HAVE SHOPPING THERE.
GOD BLESS YOU!
By: Rolande Marie Carmel Roy on August 19, 2011
at 6:37 pm
thank you mrs martha stewart for what u[ve being doing for my lovely haiti. they really have great talent people in haiti but cause there is no money ,no job u can not even see those talents people. thank you agin ,and may god bless u.
By: josette andre on January 2, 2012
at 10:32 pm