

Learn more about our artisans and field partners!
Nashville, TN // Headquarters
Nashville serves as the headquarters for shipping, handling and all things Abundance Artifacts. While the founder is often found abroad, Nashville serves as home base.
India // Artisans and Missionaries
Creative Women, Firozabad, India
Gunjan and her team of 350 artisans are part of Firozabad's glass bowing heritage and have grown up watching previous generations master their skills. Despite the push to modernize and industrialize the work, they remain committed to using traditional and time-honored techniques. In a major break with the past, however, women are now taking the helm as leaders in this traditionally male-dominated industry. Together, we have proudly sold 28,000 pieces of glassware, recycled 14 tons of glass, created 1000s of hours of fair wage artisan labor.
Sustainable Threads
This artisan group, based in Northwest India, focuses on women from communities that were displaced from their ancestral villages to create a national park. Villagers lost all their farm lands and other means of livelihood. The effort offers skill-building and employment opportunities. The artisan group was formed by the help of a foundation, to set up an income-generating project, using the talents of the displaced villagers, especially with a focus on empowering women. The displaced community prevailed with their hard work, perseverance and some donations; gradually becoming an independent enterprise, registered under the Indian society act.
Mela Artisans
Founded by Navroze S. Mehta, Mela Artisans discovers India’s finest artisans, blending their craftsmanship with contemporary style and our design vision to create vibrant, unique home décor. Partnering with over 3500 artisans all over India, their mission is to empower these makers through lasting, meaningful partnerships, celebrate the richness of heritage crafts, and drive social impact that resonates far beyond the workshop.
Pacific & Rose, Jaipur, India
From the company's California studio, designs are created that combine classic Indian Mughal motifs with a Fauvist-inspired color palette. Each design is brought to life in their fair-trade workshop in Jaipur, India where master artisans meticulously hand-carve printing blocks and block-print each piece by hand. Over 12 weeks, these textiles take shape, infused with the unique touch of the artisans, resulting in small batches of one-of-a-kind pieces.