Elephant Poo Journal
Handmade in Sri Lanka
$16.90Ref: 2576Available now
Recycled
- Ethical
- Natural
- Sustainable
- Handmade
- Fun
- 150 x 210 mm, unlined
Love your organisation and your shop, keep up the fab work.
Thank you for producing such an important publication.
I cannot do without your caring, enlightening publication.
I am really happy with your products and service. In particular "The New Internationalist" is a great resource for our Certificate 1V IN WOMEN'S EDUCATION where we study Global Issues for Women.
A distinctively different writing journal made from paper composed of 75-80% elephant dung, rice paddy husks and office waste, and a cover featuring a 'bas-relief' parade of elephants, moulded from elephant dung. The paper has a soft vellum-like feel and is beautiful to use. It is tree free, environmentally friendly and sustainable. There are no chlorines or acids used in the handmade manufacturing process and only salt dyes are used for colouring.
Manufactured in Sri Lanka, a country where traditionally elephants and humans have competed over scarce land resources resulting in injury on both sides, the production of the paper directly contributes to the villager's income, linking it to the survival of the elephants. Maximus Elephant Paper was recognised in 2006 as the winner of the BBC World Challenge, a global competition for small businesses that have shown enterprise and innovation at a grass roots level. The paper again proved its green credentials, winning the Co-op America's 'Green Business' of the year Leadership Award in 2008, recognizing the extraordinary leadership efforts of the business that has used its position in the marketplace to organize consumers and businesses together to build a more socially just and ecologically sustainable economy.
A percentage of sales proceeds go to the elephant orphanage, Millennium Elephant Foundation; affiliated with the World Society for the Protection of Animals.
About the Producer
Maximus Elephant Paper
Maximus aim to use the Elephant Dung paper to raise awareness of the tragic circumstances that surround the Sri Lankan Elephant.

