Pop along to the Bembridge workshop this half term (and other dates in February) to meet those behind this fantastic Isle of Wight brand and grab yourself a luscious new bag (or two).
The next three days bring your chance to check out Wyatt & Jack up close and personal as they open their workshop doors for a limited period, starting on Friday (5th December) with a grand opening between 3.30pm-9pm.
Introducing an innovative Isle of Wight company, Wyatt & Jack, that's sold their beautiful products around the world and has supplied companies such as Jack Wills - re-purposing deck chairs, sunbeds and even bouncy castles. Thirteen tonnes of them!
The end game is for glitter to be banned completely, but Georgia from Wyatt and Jack says this petition to the UK Government is the first step on that journey
Nellie will be collecting unwanted inflatables between Friday 25th and Thursday 31st October at Wightlink's Portsmouth terminal so they can come to the Isle of Wight and be made into bags by Wyatt & Jack
Isle of Wight's Wyatt & Jack are responsible for the Inflatable Amnesty movement, which is spanning the globe and now boasts their biggest single haul, the 5.5 tonnes of life-size inflatable Stone Henge, created by world-renowned artist, Jeremy Deller.
A group of young people at Ryde School - who work hard to raise awareness of environmental issues - recently teamed up with Isle of Wight small business, Wyatt and Jack, to collaborate on a project aimed at reducing what goes into landfill.
Since July last year, with the help of environmentally-conscious members of the public, Isle of Wight based Wyatt and Jack have managed to re-purpose around 15 tonnes of "broken inflatable weirdness" preventing it to from going to landfill.
Some of the town's lovely independents get a mention and although the feature is obviously a great big ad for iZettle, it is also a great big ad for Ventnor town and you can't argue with that.