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Tuesday, August 16, 2005 2:52 PM
PATAMABA Products
Bicol
Strengthening the Marketing Network of Women Workers
in the Informal Economy Towards Advancing Fair, Just and Sustainable Trade
PATAMABA-OXFAM Project
WEAVING IN THE BICOL REGION
The general policy of the project emphasizes assistance to women in
the improvement of their current marketing endeavors as well as in the
creation of new opportunities.
Brief Background on the Weaving Industry: Weaving in
Bicol is believed to have started centuries ago. In the early 19th century,
weavers used cotton thread bought from Manila, then dyed into different
colors before they were made into mosquito nets, blankets and other
items. In the late 1990s, materials used were rejects in different colors
from garments factories in Metro Manila and therefore need no dyeing.
Buhi in Camarines Sur, a town in Bicol region, is known for weaving.
The skill can be learned and passed on easily to the next generation.
However, as an industry or as a trade, weaving remains an individual
enterprise that is merely regarded an alternative source of income and
a woman’s trade.
The basic tool for weaving is the upright loom. Most weavers have at
least one standard loom for the size of a single blanket inside their
house or in a sheltered portion of their yard. Family members are commonly
involved in this activity. Men are observed to be better and faster
weavers but they usually sit in the loom only when the planting and
harvesting seasons are over, and when there is no other alternative
job available. Normally, the women do the weaving on top of household
chores. The youngsters, do errands for their elders, help in winding
or spooling the thread, and, also in weaving when they are big even
if not yet old enough.
The Producers There are more than (30) weavers in Lourdes, Buhi, all
home-based. Of these, twenty-one (21) are members of PATAMABA –
Buhi Chapter comprising three clusters. Cluster I has become an individual
enterprise for its members, most of whom are vulnerable to becoming
more economically disadvantaged because of over borrowing from legitimate
microfinancing institutions and loan sharks. Cluster II should develop
into a model of a cooperative undertaking where the seed fund not only
remains intact but grows as well. Cluster III is a prototype of a successful
home based cottage industry at its pioneering stage. The entrepreneur,
her household, and her workers translate their happiness and contentment
with their endeavor into very saleable products. The entrepreneur herself,
on top of being the capitalist, purchaser and manager, designs, sews
and fabricates bags and novelty items from the woven cloth which are
labeled Botingting Handwoven Products.
Product Development, Quality Control and Pricing Woven cloth from synthetic
or cotton fiber made into blankets is the main product of all the weavers.
Standard products are in the form of hand towels with an average size
of 15” X 25”, bath towels – 25” X 60”,
and standard blankets – 59” X 85” (actually two pieces
of single blankets of 30” X 85” sewn together). These are
generally machine sewn at the ends, striped or checkered, sometimes
plain but grained with black or white. Color combinations can be as
common and simple or as varied and exotic depending on the colors of
available thread.
Product development and some degree of quality control exist in Clusters
II and III. At Botingting Handwoven Products, woven cloth is also cut
and made into straps and lining for soles of slippers and sandals, or
sewn and combined with cords, beads and tassels for cell phone bags,
toiletry kits, knapsacks, body bags, coin purses, pencil holders, throw
pillow cases and others.
Cluster II produces covers for TV sets, refrigerators and telephones,
table runners, curtains, pillow cases, and bed covers, in addition to
the usual blankets and towels. Orders usually come in sets suited for
the living room, dining area and bedroom. Product innovations come from
customers’ specifications.
Cluster I produces only the standard products: blankets, bath towels
and hand towels. There is no product development and hardly any quality
control
Generally,
weavers have no control over the color of the thread, but they have
some control over the quality. Raw material sourcing is a problem that
must be addressed.
Products are sold at cost plus at least 100% mark-up. The basic tool
for weaving, which is the loom, costs around P3,000.00. The thread,
which is the basic material for woven products are purchased in bulk
from garments factory in Bulacan or in Caloocan (Metro Manila). The
entrepreneur in Cluster III goes to Manila monthly with P25,000.00 budget
to buy thread and other materials. She personally cuts the materials,
sews the samples for the novelty items, and weaves in the hand towel
loom most of the materials to be used. The cost of her labor is not
considered in pricing her products.
The average capital requirement, labor cost of weavers excluded, for
30 pieces of blanket is P1,500.00 and the average gross sale is P3,000.00
when no item is rejected A regular sewer is employed at P120/day plus
a trainee-sewer at P100/day. They sew not only blankets but all other
products that need to be sewn. When not sewing, they help in spooling
the thread.
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For the footwear manufacturing (slippers and slides), Cluster III employs
3 workers, all males who used to work in shoe factories in Metro Manila:
1 cutter/patternmaker and 2 pressers. They produce 2 dozens footwear/day
and gets paid for what each finishes at P85/dozen of slippers or P10/pair
of slides. 1 gallon of rugby is consumed for 6 dozens pairs of bottom
soles and 1 gallon of ABC white cement for 4 dozens pairs of top soles.
Financing Weavers in Cluster I resort to microfinancing loans from
Producers Bank or Banco Santiago de Libon at 2.5% interest per month
payable in 6 months.
In Cluster II, a member who has money loan to the group at 5% interest
per month. For specific orders, a 50% down payment of the agreed price
is required from the customer. So P750.00 is collected from a customer
for the agreed price of P1,500.00 for a set with crocheted edging consisting
of 2 pieces of 14” TV set covers, 4 pieces of drop window curtains,
1 set of computer cover, and 2 pieces of hanging door curtains.
Weavers in Cluster III get thread on loan or on cash basis. All loans
are paid and thread is taken on cash basis during the harvest seasons
(April and October), and the soil preparation/planting seasons (June
and November).
Marketing The Bicolanos themselves patronize woven products due to
their time-tested strength and durability. Buyers in general, go straight
to the weavers to purchase the products. Sales are brisk and no stock
is retained during the harvest seasons and in the months of November
and December. The Catholic Church, through the nuns, also place regular
orders in bulk, blankets and towels and other items from any of the
clusters. Orders are also received from “balikbayans”.
There are marketers, based in the locality, who regularly buy products
from individual weavers and sell them to teachers and employees in neighboring
towns and cities on installment; and Manila-based ones, who take orders
for custom- made products. There is also a trader who comes to buy all
the blankets in stock, rejects nothing in terms of quality or color
combination, and dispatches them to Mindanao. The weavers, too, are
the marketers themselves - they buy from their peers and do direct or
door-to-door selling, or go to the public markets, farms, schools, or
offices to sell woven products.
Cluster III maintains a regular stock pile of its products as it has
7 regular marketers and 4 outlets of its products. The regular marketers,
all direct sellers operating within Bicol, get slippers, towels and
blankets worth P500 to P1,000 on a 15- or 30-day consignment basis.
The novelty items under the label Botingting Handwoven Products are
farmed on 2-month consignment to two branches of the Outdoor Shop (P3,000
to P4,000 worth of goods each branch) and Master Square (P2,000 to P3,000)
in Naga, and a tourist shop (P3,000 to P5,000) in Cagsawa, Legazpi.
Unsold goods at the end of the consignment period are retrieved.
None of the clusters has a product catalogue, display center or regular
store for all its products. There are usual cases of unmet orders, particularly
for Cluster II, due to shortage of raw materials.
Strengthening the Marketing Network of Women Workers
in the Informal Economy Towards Advancing Fair, Just and Sustainable Trade
PATAMABA-OXFAM Project
EMBROIDERY IN THE BICOL REGION
The general policy of the project emphasizes assistance to women in
the improvement of their current marketing endeavors as well as in the
creation of new opportunities.
Brief Background on the Embroidery Industry The present generation
of embroiders in Baao, Camarines Sur trace back to 1910 the art and
skill of embroidery, with Francisca Esplana, her daughter Pacita, doing
embroidered handkerchiefs by hand. In the late1930s to the 1940s, Petra
Buena passed on the skill to the succeeding generation, as they did
bulk orders of embroidered priestly vestments, tablecloths, bed covers
and pillow cases. In the 1950s embroidery started to be done with sewing
machines with the generation of Remedios Malasarte, Isidra Benosa and
Juana Palencia. In the late 1950s to the early 1970s, Ciriaca Balmaseda
had her big house full of sewers and embroiders making embroidered ladies’
undergarments, bed covers and pillow cases. Balmaseda herself sew and
embroidered while also teaching young ladies the skills. Her husband
and more than 20 others were marketing the products within and outside
Bicol.
The present generation of embroiders do mostly pillow cases, bed covers
and bath robes on sewing machines. A few have electric motors attached
to the sewing machine so the embroider does not have to pedal anymore.
Only two embroiders are cited as having high speed sewing machines like
those in use in garments factories in Bulacan and China.
To date, no young lady is interested in embroidery and no mother is
keen on teaching their daughters the skill. The males, on the other
hand were never interested in embroidery, even if the are jobless at
prolonged times and even if embroidery is the only source of livelihood
of a family of 5 or more members. The males and other members usually
help by freeing the embroiders of domestic tasks like taking care of
the youngsters, house cleaning and cooking.
As an industry or trade, embroidery hardly advanced in Bicol –
not in product design and innovation nor in technology. It still throbs,however,
and orders still trickle. But it remains a home based and individualized
endeavor. Since it is viewed as a laborious alternative source of income
that pays too low and an exclusively woman’s trade, many young
women would rather go to Japan or work as domestic helpers.
The Producers There are more than 30 embroiders in Baao and the neigboring
San Pascual, Camarines Sur, all home-based. Majority of these are members
of PATAMABA and they are quite old, with ages ranging from mid-30’s
to late 50’s, married to husbands who are either jobless or occasionally
employed as construction workers or farmhands. None of them rents the
house they live in, which are mostly substandard annexes to the existing
house of their parents, or provided by children or siblings who are
working overseas. The women take up embroidery jobs only as a last resort
for lack of alternative means to sustain the family or augment meager
resources.
Embroidery is not an easy job yet it pays too low - an average net
income of P305 for work of 8 to 12 hours a day, 5 to 7 days a week.
It demands patience and concentration. On top of embroidery, embroiders
take care of domestic chores, like laundry and food preparation, especially
if the husband is working. The unemployed husband and the rest of the
household may help but domestic chores remain the mothers’ concerns.
The common work-related health hazards of embroidery toll heavily on
victims. Poor eyesight or glaucoma, persistent back pain, varicose veins
or arthritic limbs due to long working hours in one position and routine
movement; and needle pierced nail and finger are common reasons for
retiring from the trade even when one is not yet advanced in age. One
victim’s veins in the eye burst with blood while she was taking
a bath after working on three patches for uniforms. She went back to
her trade after a year of regular medication for want of other means
to sustain her family.
· Product Development, Quality Control and Pricing Products
are usually ordered as special gifts to balikbayan’s, at weddings
and other special occasions. These are the types usually seen in tourist
gift shops. Other products are made upon order and specifications of
customers. The regular products done for stock piling or upon orders
are
· bathrobes (made of satin, with embroidery along surface edges,
in different sizes and assorted colors);
· bedcovers (size 60” x 78”, with drop on the sides
to cover sides of bed, with embroidery along edges);
· pillow cases (with or without matching bedcover,size 17”
x 27” with or without ruffles, with embroidery along edges);
· embroidered pillow cases (size 17” x 27”) and throw
pillow cases (size 17” x 17”) with or without ruffles, made
of recycled cloth or flour sack; and
· delicately embroidered table cloth, runners and priestly vestments
are also made upon order by the Carmelite nuns.
Only the traditional designs and colors of flowers, birds and fowls
in different motions are seen on finished products. The wings of birds
and fowls are done spread out for luck.
Product Development, Quality Control, Costs and Pricing Embroidery
is undertaken as an individual enterprise, and therefore to each her
own. Decades pass without change in embroidery designs, choice of colors
and materials, and product mix.
Sewing machine is the basic tool of embroiders. Singer is the preferred
brand because of its tested durability. Brand new sewing machines cost
anywhere from P3,500.00 to P5,000.00 but it can be leased at P40.00
per month. The maintenance cost of the machine inclusive of motor oil,
miscellaneous supplies such as needles and pins, and transportation
expenses are considered insignificant. Materials and supplies are purchsed
at retail price in Iriga City.
Likewise, tracing of designs on textiles are not considered as costs.
Each embroider keeps her own file of patterns/designs (copies of designs
previously commissioned or copied from books and magazines).
Products are sold at prevailing prices which may be unreasonably low
on some items. For example, the selling price of pillow cases with ruffles
17” x 27” (1 pair) is P275.00, the average cost incurred
is P160.00 (labor and materials), with a net profit of P 54.50 only;
or a 60”x78” bedcover, which is sold at P1,500.00 and where
average cost (materials and labor) is P 1439.50, with a net profit of
only P61.50.
Product development and quality control, along with the development
of the industry itself, can progress only if the embroiders are organized
into a cooperative enterprise, and if financial, technological and marketing
interventions take place simultaneously.
Financing For job orders, the embroider requires a 50% down payment
from the customer. The cash received will be used to buy the materials
that will be needed to complete the job.
The temptation to borrow for the purpose of funding materials with which
to stock pile products is always present. Institutions that are willing
to extend microfinancing loans are Producers Bank , Banco Santiago de
Libon and the Kabalikat para sa Maunlad na Buhay, Inc. (KMBI) of the
Catholic Church. All institutions are based in Naga City.
At Producers Bank, instead of collaterals, borrowers are required to
form a cell of 6 members, to whom individual loans shall be extended
by the bank, to be paid weekly for six months. In case a member defaults
3 times, the non-defaulting members shall share in assuming the balance
of her loan. Thus, by the end of the 6 month period, when no loan shall
remain outstanding, the borrowers will get a so-called rebate or savings
from their loans. They may apply for a renewal of loan for as long as
they remain a six-member cell.
Marketing Sales are brisk during harvest seasons (more money is circulating)
and during the opening of classes in June and in December. These are
also the marrying months for couples and vacation time for locals who
come home as balikbayan. Embroidered items are the favored gifts during
these important occasions. Producers run out of stocks and there are
even unmet demands during these months.
Buyers usually go directly to the embroiders to purchase their products.
There are traders or marketers. who periodically place orders for regular
or custom-made products, that they themselves sell on installment to
teachers and employees in neighboring towns and cities
For added income, embroiders also sell their own and their peers’
products in the public markets of neighboring towns and barangays. They
also do direct selling, going house-to-house, even in the remote barrios.
Recommendations For weaving and embroidery, the common work-related
health hazards toll heavily on women: Poor eyesight or glaucoma, persistent
back pain, varicose veins or arthritic limbs due to long working hours
in one position and routine movement; and needle pierced nail and finger.
Addressing the above problems must be in conjunction with other equally
important considerations in order to achieve a more effective and efficient
undertaking.
- Through training, business development assistance and basic business
management tools must be extended to members, focusing on individual
abilities and the organization’s business operations. Regular
monitoring must take place to ensure that such tools are appropriate
for the level of operations and potential capabilities of each member
and that of the organization.
- There is need to tap professional assistance for improved and better
quality production. In addition members will also need training on new
product designs, color combinations, packaging, promotions, and product
diversification.
- Development of promotional materials (brochures) and setting up a
marketing shop to serve as wholesale and retail outlet, also for showcasing
products and storage for inventories or stocks. Quality direction and
design development must be considered in marketing their products.
- Awareness and education on proper credit utilisation and timing must
be undertaken to ensure that loans are utilized as intended and that
borrowers will avoid overborrowing.
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