Step into India’s hidden world of repair and reinvention — where cobblers, tailors, mechanics, and everyday innovators quietly power a sustainable way of life. This photo story is a visual tribute to the spirit of jugaad, capturing the beauty of fixing, mending, and making do in a throwaway world.
India’s cleanest city has found a new way to practise sustainability — by helping citizens donate, repair, and reuse old goods through its RRR (Reduce, Reuse, Recycle) Centre.
India is preparing to introduce a Right to Repair framework, that will make it mandatory for manufacturers to offer repair services for smartphones, consumer durables and automobile products. Here's what you should know about this law.
When electronic devices or electrical appliances break down, people often choose to toss out the old unit and buy a new replacement because it seems cheaper and less of a hassle. The responsible, eco-friendly option is to fix them.
For us, this is not a job or even a business. It is a proud passion that we have and will continue to carry on for generations,” says the family that's played a silent chord in creating legends. #history #LostTales
Repair Café in Bengaluru is rejuvenating the dying skill of repairing things we would normally discard. This also ensures that less stuff ends up in garbage dumps and landfills and people reuse objects instead on spending money on buying new ones.