This Brazilian’s Cattle Horns Jewels Became a Hit in the US and Europe

Jóias do PantanalIsabel Muxfeldt’s idea of making cattle horns into female jewels worked out. Muxfeldt is a Brazilian businesswoman and designer. Currently, her company Jóias do Pantanal, from Mato Grosso do Sul, is exporting its products to Portugal, Spain, Switzerland and the United States.

Cotton thread, leather, Brazilian gems, silver, stainless steel and forestry wood are included in the finishing of the jewelry and decoration accessories developed by Isabel and Ana Muxfeldt, who use cattle horn as the main raw material.

According to Isabel, cattle horn is greatly used in Mato Grosso do Sul for production of blowing horns (wind instruments used to control cattle) and for the drinking of tereré (a beverage made out of mate herb and cold water).

“In the beginning it was hard to make suppliers accept the idea of working with horn for production of female jewelry,” said Isabel, who has the Brazilian Micro and Small Business Support Service (Sebrae) and the Technological Incubator at Uniderp, in Campo Grande, the state capital, as partners.

For the production of the items, Jóias do Pantanal employs nine people. “Many are women over 40 who do not have many work opportunities,” said Isabel, who made a point of saying that all of them underwent training and work from home.

All the exports were made through the company site. According to Isabel, sales take place mainly in the summer in the Northern Hemisphere. The shipments are through the postal service.

Currently, Jóias do Pantanal produces 1,000 items a month, but may greatly expand production if demand rises. “It is all done very artistically and we always follow fashion tendencies,” said Isabel, who inaugurated a company showroom one year ago in Campo Grande. To promote the jewels in Brazil, the partners participated in fairs in several states.

Apart from earrings, necklaces, bracelets and rings, Jóias do Pantanal is also investing in a line of accessories for offices and decorations. “Our items are already present in several shops in several states in Brazil,” said Isabel.

The state of Mato Grosso do Sul has the largest cattle herd in Brazil and cattle horn is treated as a by-product by slaughterhouses, normally not being industrially reused. It was from this principle, making industrial residue into products that translate the culture of Mato Grosso do Sul, that Isabel started working with the jewels in 2002.

Creativity, quality and management of Jóias do Pantanal caused Isabel to be among the three Brazilian finalists in the second edition of the “Empretec Women in Business Award”, organized by the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (Unctad).

The initiative is turned to women from several countries who participated in the Empretec, a UN seminar that, in Brazil, is promoted by the Sebrae. The aim is to work on entrepreneurial behavior.

Service

Jóias do Pantanal
Site: www.joiasdopantanal.com.br

Anba

Tags:

You May Also Like

World Social Forum Back in Brazil and Ready for Change

Representatives of the Organizing Committee of the World Social Forum (WSF) met yesterday, November ...

UN Official Finds a Brazil Full of Will and Ills

The frailty of public defenders’ offices in Brazil, the creation of special court districts, ...

Guarani Kaiowá Indians from Mato Grosso do Sul in Brazil

Brazilian Federal Justice Orders Release of 9 Indians in Jail for a Year

The nine Guarani-Kaiowá from Passo Piraju who have been in prison in the Brazilian ...

Brazil Cooperatives Sell Less Overseas, But Revenues Grow 28%

Cooperatives in Brazil had revenues of US$ 1.86 billion with exports in the first ...

One Third of Brazil’s Crops Come from Family Farms

A study by Brazil’s Economic Research Institute Foundation (FIPE) reveals that family farming, although ...

Brazil Teaches Civil Defense to 9 Caribbean Nations

Beginning on May 8, Brazil will hold courses in BrasÀ­lia, Florianópolis, Recife, and Rio ...

A Tribute to a Brazilian Writer Who Made Theater into a Weapon for the Oppressed

Brazilian playwright and educator Augusto Boal died in Brazil recently at age 78. Boal ...

Brazil’s Higher Inflation Leaves Little Room for Interest Rates Cuts

Consumer prices in Brazil rose faster than expected in the month to mid-July on ...

Dekasseguis Send More than US$ 1 Billion a Year to Brazil

The 280 thousand Brazilians currently living in Japan – almost all Japanese descents, called ...

Lula Defends Brazil’s Central Bank Interest Rates Policy

In a speech at Petrobras regional headquarters in the Greater ABC region of São ...